id,instruct_1,instruct_2,context,instruct_1_q_1,instruct_1_q_2,instruct_1_q_3,instruct_1_q_4,instruct_1_q_5,instruct_1_answer,instruct_2_answer 001_384,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," As Cole shops, an armed robber demands that the cashier, Michael, hand over all the money in the safe. Michael empties the cash register and says that there is no safe in the shop. As the robber becomes increasingly agitated, Cole approaches him, calls him a coward, and dares the robber to shoot him. Michael intercedes and attempts to wrestle the gun away from the robber, only to be shot in the gut. After Cole calls an ambulance, he receives a phone call from a friend who invites him out to drinks. Cole accepts on the condition that it is not a house party. Cole is frustrated to learn that it is a house party, and he goes downstairs to drink alone, where he meets Maya, the host. The two discuss an approaching asteroid. Maya says that modern stress would evaporate in the face of the meaninglessness of certain doom, and Cole says that everything would matter in that circumstance. The two dance to Maya's favorite song and soon begin dating. A series of flashforwards depict life in post-apocalyptic Scotland after the asteroid has arrived as Cole and Maya hide from alien spaceships, mixed with scenes in the present of their relationship leading up to those events. When they discuss children, Cole says he does not want any, and Maya reveals she is incapable. As the asteroid grows closer, Cole asks Maya to marry him. Maya jokingly accepts, and Cole insists that he is serious; now serious, Maya again agrees. Although initially dismissive of the danger, scientists become increasingly worried about a collision. Various missions to divert the asteroid end in failure, putting the world on edge. In the flashforwards, Cole and Maya's relationship deteriorates in the face of their hardship in finding food and shelter.",(1) Who does Peter eventually become engaged to?,(2) Where did Picasso meet the woman he sedated?,(3) Which religion does Armida eventually convert to?,(4) Where does Cole meet the woman he eventually proposes to?,(5) Where do Alessandro and Ramona eventually move to?,4,Cole. 001_491,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Before the 1760s, Westgate consisted of only a farm, a coastguard station (built 1791 and still standing in Old Boundary Road) and a few cottages for the crew that surrounded it. These were located beside the coast at St Mildred's Bay, named after Mildrith, Thanet's patron saint and a one-time Abbess of Minster. The town inherited its name from the Westgate Manor, which was located in the area in medieval times. In the early 20th century, the remains of a Roman villa were discovered in what is now Beach Road, where a stream once used to flow. Fresh water can still be seen rising from the sand at low tide. During the late 1860s, businessmen developed the area into a seaside resort for the upper to middle-classes. A stretch of sea wall, with promenade on top, was constructed around the beaches at St Mildred's Bay and West Bay, and the land divided into plots to be sold for what would become an exclusive development by the sea for wealthy metropolitan families within a gated community, rather than for occasional tourists. The opening of a railway station, in 1871, led to the rapid expansion of the population, which reached 2,738 by 1901. The demands of the increasing population led to the building of the parish churches of St. James in 1872 and St. Saviour in 1884. St. Saviour's was designed by the architect C.N. Beazley. In 1884 it was reported that Essex, on the other side of the Thames Estuary, was hit by a tremor so large that it caused the bells of St. James' Church to ring. In 1884, ownership of most of the resort passed to Coutts Bank, after the previous proprietors had gone bankrupt.Around twenty schools were opened during the late 19th century, although many had only a few pupils or closed within a few years. The largest of the schools were Streete Court School, Wellington House Preparatory School and St Michael's School.Wellington House was established in 1886 by two clergymen, the Bull brothers. It closed in 1970 and was demolished in 1972. Notable old boys included Doctor Who actor Jon Pertwee and cabinet minister John Profumo, known for his involvement in the Profumo affair. Streete Court School was opened in 1894 by John Vine Milne, the father of the author A. A. Milne. In the 1890s, the school was attended by St John Philby, the father of the spy Kim Philby.The Coronation Bandstand was built by the cliff edge in 1903, at a cost of £350, to celebrate the coronation of King Edward VII. The following year, a group of French Ursuline nuns, who were banned from teaching in France, fled with some of their pupils to Westgate-on-Sea and established the Ursuline Convent School, which in 1995 was re-established as Ursuline College. In 1910, a Swiss-Gothic styled town hall was built. However, it was soon decided that the building could be put to better use, and in 1912, it was transformed into the Town Hall Cinema. In 1932, it was renamed the Carlton Cinema.",(1) What is the first name of the person whose ship was trapped in March of 1912?,(2) Who was appointed president in 1912?,"(3) What is the name of the current building that was constructed in 1863, although the original purpose is obscure?",(4) What is the current name of the plant species that was named after Sole?,(5) What is the current name of the building that was transformed in 1912?,5,Westgate. 001_488,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Before the 1760s, Westgate consisted of only a farm, a coastguard station (built 1791 and still standing in Old Boundary Road) and a few cottages for the crew that surrounded it. These were located beside the coast at St Mildred's Bay, named after Mildrith, Thanet's patron saint and a one-time Abbess of Minster. The town inherited its name from the Westgate Manor, which was located in the area in medieval times. In the early 20th century, the remains of a Roman villa were discovered in what is now Beach Road, where a stream once used to flow. Fresh water can still be seen rising from the sand at low tide. During the late 1860s, businessmen developed the area into a seaside resort for the upper to middle-classes. A stretch of sea wall, with promenade on top, was constructed around the beaches at St Mildred's Bay and West Bay, and the land divided into plots to be sold for what would become an exclusive development by the sea for wealthy metropolitan families within a gated community, rather than for occasional tourists. The opening of a railway station, in 1871, led to the rapid expansion of the population, which reached 2,738 by 1901. The demands of the increasing population led to the building of the parish churches of St. James in 1872 and St. Saviour in 1884. St. Saviour's was designed by the architect C.N. Beazley. In 1884 it was reported that Essex, on the other side of the Thames Estuary, was hit by a tremor so large that it caused the bells of St. James' Church to ring. In 1884, ownership of most of the resort passed to Coutts Bank, after the previous proprietors had gone bankrupt.Around twenty schools were opened during the late 19th century, although many had only a few pupils or closed within a few years. The largest of the schools were Streete Court School, Wellington House Preparatory School and St Michael's School.Wellington House was established in 1886 by two clergymen, the Bull brothers. It closed in 1970 and was demolished in 1972. Notable old boys included Doctor Who actor Jon Pertwee and cabinet minister John Profumo, known for his involvement in the Profumo affair. Streete Court School was opened in 1894 by John Vine Milne, the father of the author A. A. Milne. In the 1890s, the school was attended by St John Philby, the father of the spy Kim Philby.The Coronation Bandstand was built by the cliff edge in 1903, at a cost of £350, to celebrate the coronation of King Edward VII. The following year, a group of French Ursuline nuns, who were banned from teaching in France, fled with some of their pupils to Westgate-on-Sea and established the Ursuline Convent School, which in 1995 was re-established as Ursuline College. In 1910, a Swiss-Gothic styled town hall was built. However, it was soon decided that the building could be put to better use, and in 1912, it was transformed into the Town Hall Cinema. In 1932, it was renamed the Carlton Cinema.",(1) What is the current name of the plant species that was named after Sole?,(2) Who was appointed president in 1912?,(3) What is the current name of the building that was transformed in 1912?,"(4) What is the name of the current building that was constructed in 1863, although the original purpose is obscure?",(5) What is the first name of the person whose ship was trapped in March of 1912?,3,Westgate. 001_198,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," little Judy, who is traveling with her selfish, uncaring father, David and her rich, callous, arrogant stepmother Rosemary. David only has Judy due to a court order and barely tolerates her presence. After their car is stuck in mud and the rain begins, they find a mansion. After breaking in, they are found by the owners, a kindly older couple, Gabriel and Hilary Hartwicke. Rosemary threw Judy's beloved teddy bear into the bushes while out in the rain, so Gabriel gifts her a new doll, Mr. Punch. They are invited to stay and while eating, Isabel and Enid (two British punk rocker hitchhikers) barge in with the person who picked them up, Ralph. Gabriel reveals himself to be a talented toy maker; their house is filled with dolls, puppets, and many other beautifully detailed and handmade toys. The Hartwickes invite the stranded travelers to join them to stay as guests until the storm ends and show them to their rooms.",(1) Whose presence does David hardly tolerate?,(2) What can plants tolerate?,(3) Whose family is David sent to live with?,(4) Whose presence threatens the soon-to-be bride's happiness?,(5) Whose presence is barely tolerated?,1,Gabriel. 001_174,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," ""Originally we were going to invest the whole lot in some capital growth fund and spend it all on one big event, maybe at the millennium"".In the four years following The KLF's retirement, Drummond and Cauty's musical output consisted only of a limited edition single released in Israel and Palestine (""K Cera Cera""), and a contribution to The Help Album (""The Magnificent""). In 1997, British artist Jeremy Deller pioneered the Acid Brass concept, collaborating with the Williams Fairey Brass Band to interpret and perform classic acid house tracks as brass arrangements. Deller was described by one source as a prankster, a notion frequently applied to Drummond and Cauty themselves. In February 1997, Drummond was contacted by his former Big in Japan bandmate Jayne Casey, who was helping to organise an arts festival in Liverpool and had noticed that Acid Brass' repertoire included The KLF's ""What Time Is Love?"". Drummond attended the festival performance and heard ""What Time Is Love?"" performed as the encore, during which he telephoned Cauty. Cauty and Drummond together attended a 19 April Acid Brass performance at the Queen Elizabeth Hall, London. Collaborative work ensued between Drummond, Cauty, and Deller, in which the Acid Brass rendition of their track was incorporated into a composition designed to mark the tenth anniversary of Drummond and Cauty's first work.",(1) What was the first name of the person who was accompanied by 12 missionaries?,(2) What is the first name of the person who was managed by Colomby?,(3) What is the first name of the person who kills Big Ed?,(4) What is the first name of the person who was was contacted by his former Big in Japan bandmate Jayne Casey?,(5) What is the first name of the person who was to address Joseph by his first name?,4,Bill. 001_433,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," After World War II, a German named Hans Müller is one of a shipload of Jewish refugees who disembark at Haifa in 1949. Like many other concentration camp survivors, Hans has psychological problems, including survivor guilt. At one point, he mistakes a woman and some children for his murdered family. At the first opportunity, he sneaks out of the refugee camp and goes into the city. When he spots a policeman, Hans panics and reacts by fleeing. The policeman chases him down and begins questioning him. Hans becomes very agitated and attacks, leaving the man unconscious in the street. Hans flees and ends up sleeping in the countryside, where he is found by a teenage orphan Sabra, Yehoshua ""Josh"" Bresler. Hans pretends to be an eccentric American, out to see Israel firsthand. Josh offers to be his guide. During their journey, Hans reveals that he was a professional juggler; Josh persuades him to pass on his knowledge. Meanwhile, police detective Karni sets out to track the fugitive down. On their journey, Josh is injured when he wanders into a minefield. He is taken to a hospital at a nearby kibbutz, but has only broken his leg. While Josh recovers, Hans becomes acquainted with one of the residents, Ya'el (Milly Vitale). They are attracted to each other, but he at first strongly resists her attempt to persuade him to remain at the kibbutz. He reveals to her that he had ignored warnings from friends to flee Nazi Germany before it was too late, making the fatal mistake of counting on his fame and popularity to protect his family. Gradually, however, he begins to settle in. Karni finally tracks Hans down and tries to take him into custody. Hans panics again and barricades himself in Ya'el's room with her rifle, but Ya'el and Karni get him to admit he needs help and to give himself up.","(1) What is the last name of the person that called himself a ""hitter""?",(2) What is that last name of the person who is a toy maker?,(3) What is the last name of the person that wanders into a minefield?,(4) What is the last name of the person who went into a hypothermic sleep?,(5) What is the last name of the person who begins to believe that they are changing into a vampire?,3,his fame and popularity. 001_434,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," After selecting the music by Alexandrov for the national anthem, Stalin needed new lyrics. He thought that the song was short and, because of the Great Patriotic War, that it needed a statement about the impending defeat of Germany by the Red Army. The poets Sergey Mikhalkov and Gabriel El-Registan were called to Moscow by one of Stalin's staffers, and were told to fix the lyrics to Alexandrov's music. They were instructed to keep the verses the same, but to find a way to change the refrains which described ""a Country of Soviets"". Because of the difficulty of expressing the concepts of the Great Patriotic War in song, that idea was dropped from the version which El-Registan and Mikhalkov completed overnight. After a few minor changes to emphasize the Russian Motherland, Stalin approved the anthem and had it published on 7 November 1943, including a line about Stalin ""inspir[ing] us to keep the faith with the people"". The revised anthem was announced to all of the USSR on January 1, 1944 and became official on March 15, 1944.After Stalin's death in 1953, the Soviet government examined his legacy. The government began the de-Stalinization process, which included downplaying the role of Stalin and moving his corpse from Lenin's Mausoleum to the Kremlin Wall Necropolis. In addition, the anthem lyrics composed by Mikhalkov and El-Registan were officially scrapped by the Soviet government in 1956. The anthem was still used by the Soviet government, but without any official lyrics. In private, this anthem became known the ""Song Without Words"". Mikhalkov wrote a new set of lyrics in 1970, but they were not submitted to the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet until May 27, 1977. The new lyrics, which eliminated any mention of Stalin, were approved on 1 September, and were made official with the printing of the new Soviet Constitution in October 1977. In the credits for the 1977 lyrics, Mikhalkov was mentioned, but references to El-Registan, who died in 1945, were dropped for unknown reasons.",(1) What is the full name of the person that wanted to commit suicide?,(2) What is the last name of the person whose statement was broadcast that evening?,(3) What is the first name of the person who was a Russian cultural ambassador to Weimar Germany?,(4) What is the last name of the person that Rhodes assists to defeat the miners?,(5) What is the name of the person that wanted to add a statement about the impending defeat of Germany?,5,revised anthem. 001_166,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Gloria Wandrous wakes up in the apartment of wealthy executive Weston Liggett and finds that he has left her $250. An insulted Gloria, whose dress is torn, takes Liggett's wife Emily's (Dina Merrill) mink coat to cover herself and scrawls ""No Sale"" in lipstick on the mirror, but she orders her telephone answering service, BUtterfield 8, to put Liggett through if he calls. Gloria visits a childhood friend, pianist Steve Carpenter, who chastises her for wasting her life on one-night stands but agrees to ask his girlfriend Norma to lend her a dress. Gloria leaves, and Norma tells Steve to choose between her and Gloria. Liggett takes a train to the countryside where his wife Emily is caring for her mother. A friend, Bingham Smith, advises him to end his adulterous relationships and return to Bing's law firm instead of working for the chemical business of Emily's father. Meanwhile, Gloria lies to her mother Annie, claiming to have spent the night at Norma's. Liggett returns home. Finding the lipstick and money, he phones Gloria to explain the money was meant for her to buy a new dress, to replace the one that he had torn. While drinking later that night, Liggett advises her to ask a high price for her lovemaking talents. She insists she does not take payment from her dates and claims she has been hired as a model to advertise the dress she is wearing at three bistros that night. Liggett follows Gloria, watching her flirt with dozens of men at several clubs. He then drives her to a run-down motel. After sleeping together, Liggett and Gloria decide to explore their relationship further. Together for five days, they grow closer, falling genuinely in love with one another and parting only upon the return of Liggett's wife.",(1) What is the full name of the person who has a wife named Lisa?,(2) What is the full name of the person who has a girlfriend named Nedra?,(3) What is the full name of the person who has a friend named Susan?,(4) What is the full name of the person who has a friend named Rachel?,(5) What is the full name of the man who has a friend named Bingham Smith?,5,Weston. 001_226,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," a clumsy plagiarism of the Russian School"" and called Ravel a ""mediocrely gifted debutant ... who will perhaps become something if not someone in about ten years, if he works hard."" Another critic, Pierre Lalo, thought that Ravel showed talent, but was too indebted to Debussy and should instead emulate Beethoven. Over the succeeding decades Lalo became Ravel's most implacable critic.From the start of his career, Ravel appeared calmly indifferent to blame or praise. Those who knew him well believed that this was no pose but wholly genuine. The only opinion of his music that he truly valued was his own, perfectionist and severely self-critical. At twenty years of age he was, in the words of the biographer Burnett James, ""self-possessed, a little aloof, intellectually biased, given to mild banter."" He dressed like a dandy and was meticulous about his appearance and demeanour. Orenstein comments that, short in stature, light in frame, and bony in features, Ravel had the ""appearance of a well-dressed jockey"", whose large head seemed suitably matched to his formidable intellect. During the late 1890s and into the early years of the next century, Ravel was bearded in the fashion of the day; from his mid-thirties he was clean-shaven.",(1) What are the last names of the two people who Palmer said were obvious influences to Curtis?,(2) What are the names of the two people who played a joke on Nigel?,(3) Whose teachers were key influences on their development as a composer?,(4) What are the names of Ravel's two teachers who were key influences on his development as a composer?,(5) What are the first names of the two people who were dismissed as the Beatles' lawyers?,4,Ravel. 001_430,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," A young idealistic schoolteacher named Ruth Kirke is transporting a group of war orphans from South China to Calcutta when their steamship Tollare is torpedoed and sunk in the Pacific. Along with sailor Timothy Blake, they are the only passengers to survive the enemy attack. They are picked up by the steamship Westonia and taken to San Francisco, where immigration officials inform Ruth that the orphans will be held until a $500 bond is posted for each child. With no money of their own, Ruth and Timothy go to the home of Commodore Thomas Spencer Holliday, the wealthy owner of their sunken cargo ship, who perished during the torpedo attack. When they appeal for financial assistance for the orphans, the commodore's family refuses. Desperate to help the children, Timothy tells the commodore's family that Ruth and the commodore were married aboard the Tollare before it was attacked. With the children's future at stake, Ruth reluctantly goes along with the deception. Ruth, Timothy, and the eight orphans move into the Holliday mansion, where they soon meet the commodore's grandson, Thomas Spencer Holliday III. When a sceptical Tom questions Ruth about how she became his grandmother, Ruth explains that her Christian mission was destroyed in a Japanese bombing raid, and that she was sent south with eight European children, entrusted with their safety. Along the way, they encountered a dying Chinese woman, and Ruth agreed to care for her child as well. Moved by her personal story and her beautiful singing voice, Tom is soon smitten with the young woman.","(1) Who is married to the person that is ""born from death""?",(2) Who told Macreedy that Komoko is dead?,(3) Who is married to Scott?,(4) Who is told that there was an accident?,(5) Who is told that Ruth is married to the commodore?,5,the commodore's family. 001_406,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Arthurlie, Holehouse, Crofthead, Kirkstyle, Coldoun, Gateside, Hollows, Broadley, Nether Kirkton and Neilstonside.Neilston's built environment is characterised by its mixture of 19th- and 20th-century detached cottages, single and two-story buildings. Several mansion houses were built for the owners of former mills and factories. Many of Neilston's dwellings are painted in whites or ivories. In his book Ordnance Survey of Scotland (1884), Francis Hindes Groome remarked that Neilston ""presents an old-fashioned yet neat and compact appearance"", a view echoed by Hugh McDonald in Rambles Round Glasgow (1910), who stated that Neilston ""is a compact, neat, and withal somewhat old-fashioned little township"", although continued that it has ""few features calling for special remark"". It is frequently described as a quiet dormitory village, although some sources from around the turn of the 20th century describe Neilston as a town. There is a mixture of suburbs, semi-rural, rural and former-industrial locations in Neilston, but overwhelmingly the land use in central Neilston is sub-urban. The territory of Neilston is not contiguous with any other settlement, and according to the General Register Office for Scotland, does not form part of Greater Glasgow, the United Kingdom's fifth largest conurbation.",(1) What is the last name of the person that agreed with the views of the author of Ordnance Survey of Scotland?,(2) What is the last name of the man who included the location of the Smythe's Megalith in his 1924 Ordnance Survey guide?,(3) What is the last name of the person who Roy agreed to teach?,(4) What is the name of the person that views there first snowfall as a miracle?,(5) What is the last name of the person that Hitler's top assassin aids in Scotland?,1,Greater Glasgow. 001_85,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," College student Sarah Foster is found by the police, as she is sleepwalking in her nightgown on the road. Since the suicide of her husband Jonathon, who worked as a novelist, she is suffering from sleep disorder. A few days later, she talks to Dr Cooper, whose student she was, about the sleepwalking and a recurring nightmare, in which she is attacked by an unknown man. Cooper sends her to a therapy in a sleep laboratory. During a walk on a cemetery, Sarah talks about it with her room mate Dawn, who shows a personal interest in her professor Owen. Then an attractive man gets out of a black car and Sarah imagines him being a single. At the evening in the sleep laboratory, Dr. Koslov explains to her that her neuronal activity will be observed during the night. He also introduces her to Dr. Scott White, the director of the lab. It is the man whom Sarah has seen at the cemetery. He tells her, that a student was buried and he was there with a colleague. Sarah confides to him that she loved her husband, but not his work as a novelist. The next morning she wakes up in a different room after a silent, dreamless night. White takes her case. He reports about irregularities in the theta waves and asks her to spend some more nights in the lab. Sarah recognizes that something is wrong. In the lecture hall she questions the statement of her teacher, who thinks that love stories are just a dopamine kick or a bipolar disorder. But she is even more irritated when he addresses her as Miss Wells and a student repeats this name. Also Dawn, her driver's license, her diary and a dedication in her husband's book affirm this surname. Sarah is rejected by Cooper's assistant. In the sleep laboratory Dr Koslov shows her a protocol about her dream in which she is pursued. She denies having dreamed anything, but sees her signature on the form.",(1) How does Mary Rowlandson learns her husband is alive?,(2) Whose husband is a wealthy businessman?,(3) Whose needs were no longer relevant to the new style?,(4) Whose husband was kidnapped?,(5) Whose husband is no longer alive?,5,Sarah. 001_345,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," the Pōhakuloa (180–130 ka), Wāihu (80–60 ka) and Mākanaka (40–13 ka) series. These have extensively sculpted the summit, depositing moraines and a circular ring of till and gravel along the volcano's upper flanks. Subglacial eruptions built cinder cones during the Mākanaka glaciation, most of which were heavily gouged by glacial action. The most recent cones were built between 9000 and 4500 years ago, atop the glacial deposits, although one study indicates that the last eruption may have been around 3600 years ago.At their maximum extent, the glaciers extended from the summit down to between 3,200 and 3,800 m (10,500 and 12,500 ft) of elevation. A small body of permafrost, less than 25 m (80 ft) across, was found at the summit of Mauna Kea before 1974, and may still be present. Small gullies etch the summit, formed by rain- and snow-fed streams that flow only during winter melt and rain showers.",(1) What was likely covered by later lava flows on Mauna Loa?,(2) Why Dylan song was covered by Billy Joel?,(3) What was later discovered written by Luther?,(4) What did the United States Exploring Expedition name the second camp on the way up to the summit of Mauna Loa?,(5) What group was covered by private insurance in 2000?,1,glaciation. 001_409,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," The earthquake was preceded by a foreshock, which, although modest, was strong enough to cause chaos and force people to flee from their homes into the streets. The main shock originated southeast of Ambato. When the primary shock hit Ambato's main cathedral and military barracks collapsed, as did most of the city's buildings, scores of young girls preparing for their First Communion perished in the cathedral. The shaking ruptured water mains, disabled communication lines, opened cracks in the earth, reduced bridges to rubble, and derailed a train. The earthquake demolished buildings in rural hamlets; closer to the nearest mountains of the Andes, landslides destroyed roads and blocked rivers. The village of Libertad near Pelileo sank 460 m (1,509 ft) into a huge hole about 800 m (2,625 ft) in diameter with all of its 100 inhabitants. Shaking up to intensity IV extended as far away as Quito and Guayaquil.Initial reports (around August 7) estimated the death toll at 2,700 people. The cities of Patate and Pelileo suffered the most with 1,000 and 1,300 dead respectively. In Ambato reports of the death toll ranged from 400 to 500, and the Ecuadorean Embassy in Washington, D.C., estimated that 1,000 to more than 2,000 people were injured. The town of Pillaro, destroyed by the quake, had more than 20 dead, and in Latacunga, 11 were killed and 30 injured; 50 homes, two churches, and the local government building were also ruined. Fifteen other towns and cities were also badly affected, including Guano which was devastated.Later counts assumed around 3,200 casualties in Pelileo; the total death toll estimates were adjusted to around 4,000 people. Officials reported that many of the dead had been inside buildings as they buckled or were killed by flooding brought about by the blockage of a drainage canal. Others were crushed by landslides from nearby mountains. No homes in the city of Pelileo were left standing, many buildings were flattened, and large cracks formed in the ground. In Ambato alone 75 percent of the homes still standing had to be demolished. On August 8, an aftershock with ""considerable strength"" struck near Ambato.The final death toll according to the United States Geological Survey was 5,050. The earthquake severely affected some 30 communities and left approximately 100,000 people homeless.",(1) What happens after the earthquake?,(2) What city suffered with 1000 dead after the earthquake?,(3) Which city caused fewer dead zones?,(4) What percentage of the Taínos were dead thirty years after contact with Columbus?,(5) What was cut after the earthquake?,2,Patate. 001_414,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," The closure of the East Lancashire and Radcliffe Paper Mills, both of which employed thousands of people, has left a large gap in the town's local economy. Along with the decline of local industry the town's shopping centre has suffered a severe loss of trade and is now barely viable as a retail outlet. Radcliffe's market hall compares poorly with the neighbouring Bury Market. Amongst other shops, the town's central shopping precinct retains a Boots. A Dunelm Group, formerly known as Dunelm Mill, home and soft furnishings store now occupies the former site of the town's Asda supermarket on Green Street. In February 2018 a new Lidl store opened its doors on the site of the old bus station employing around forty people.""Re-inventing Radcliffe"" is the name given on a report of a proposed improvement scheme. The report envisages several initiatives, and includes the creation of new housing both to the north and south of the town. Existing industry to the west of the town and along Milltown Street would be retained and improved, along with sections of the former Radcliffe Paper Mill and Pioneer Mill. The market would be redeveloped along with the Kwik Save site and bus station, and the town could become a centre for the arts. To improve transport links, new crossings of the Irwell and canal are proposed. Plans for a new secondary school in Radcliffe are now in doubt, however a new build at Castlebrook High School Parr Lane,Bury BL9 8LP began in January. Finally, the report suggests improving the image of Radcliffe within the Bury area. On 27 June 2018, due to very hot weather, a fire started on the exterior of the complex of shops adjoining the precinct as roofing tar caught alight. ""Newlands"" is a regeneration programme run by the Forestry Commission. One site under consideration for regeneration is the former waste tip of Radcliffe E'es.",(1) name a store that is known for its catalogue.,(2) What is the name of the convenience store that Dante works at?,(3) What is the name of the store that is currently on Green Street?,(4) Which railway is on Hill Street?,(5) What is the full name of the person that worked on the Allied Press building in Lower Stuart Street?,3,Radcliffe. 001_209,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," In the US, ""Diamonds"" debuted at number 16 on the Billboard Hot 100 and sold 133,000 copies in its first week. In its fourth week, it climbed to number eight on the chart and became Rihanna's twenty-third top-ten single. For the week ending December 1, 2012, the song became Rihanna's twelfth number-one on the chart, which ended the nine-week reign of Maroon 5's ""One More Night"". With the feat, Rihanna tied Madonna and Supremes as the artists with the fifth-most number ones in the chart's history. Rihanna also passed Mariah Carey as the female artist to mark 12 number-one songs the fastest on the chart by achieving the feat in six years and seven months, which bested Carey's stretch of seven years, one month, and two weeks. ""Diamonds"" charted for a second consecutive week atop the Hot 100, while her album Unapologetic topped the Billboard 200. As a result, Rihanna became only the second artist of 2012 to top both the Billboard singles and albums charts simultaneously; the first to do so was English singer Adele.On the Radio Songs chart, ""Diamonds"" debuted at number 28. In its fourth week, it climbed to number ten, becoming Rihanna's 19th top ten, breaking a tie with Lil Wayne for the second-best sum in the list's 22-year history; only Mariah Carey (23) has more. For the issue dated December 15, the song topped the chart, becoming Rihanna's tenth number one and placing second for female artists with the most chart toppers, only behind Mariah Carey (11). On the Pop Songs chart, ""Diamonds"" debuted at number 29, extending Rihanna's lead as the artist with the most appearances on the chart. On October 11, 2012, Billboard unveiled new methodology for the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart, newly factoring digital download sales and streaming data into the 50-position rankings, along with existing radio airplay data monitored by Nielsen BDS. Due to this, ""Diamonds"" saw a huge leap from number 66 to number one, marking Rihanna's second single as a lead artist to top the chart; it topped the chart for fourteen consecutive weeks. ""Diamonds"" topped the Dance Club Songs chart, becoming Rihanna's nineteenth number one, tying her with Janet Jackson for the second-most number ones in the chart's 36-year history. Only Madonna has more (43). ""Diamonds"" was certified sextuple platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA). In Canada, the song debuted at number nine on the Canadian Hot 100 for the issue dated October 13, 2012. The song peaked at number one on the issue dated November 24, 2012, becoming Rihanna's sixth single to reach number one on the chart. It remained atop of it for four consecutive weeks. It was certified platinum by Music Canada denoting sales of over 80,000 copies.",(1) What is the full name of the first artist to have number-one singles in four separate decades?,(2) What is the full name of the chart on which Rihanna passed Mariah Carey as the female artist to mark 12 number-one songs fastest?,(3) Mariah Carey was joined by which group on the 2000 single 'Against All Odds'?,(4) What song by Mariah Carey influenced her?,(5) What is the full name of the first white artist to chart the first house record in the U.S.?,2,top both the Billboard singles and albums charts simultaneously. 001_429,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," A young idealistic schoolteacher named Ruth Kirke is transporting a group of war orphans from South China to Calcutta when their steamship Tollare is torpedoed and sunk in the Pacific. Along with sailor Timothy Blake, they are the only passengers to survive the enemy attack. They are picked up by the steamship Westonia and taken to San Francisco, where immigration officials inform Ruth that the orphans will be held until a $500 bond is posted for each child. With no money of their own, Ruth and Timothy go to the home of Commodore Thomas Spencer Holliday, the wealthy owner of their sunken cargo ship, who perished during the torpedo attack. When they appeal for financial assistance for the orphans, the commodore's family refuses. Desperate to help the children, Timothy tells the commodore's family that Ruth and the commodore were married aboard the Tollare before it was attacked. With the children's future at stake, Ruth reluctantly goes along with the deception. Ruth, Timothy, and the eight orphans move into the Holliday mansion, where they soon meet the commodore's grandson, Thomas Spencer Holliday III. When a sceptical Tom questions Ruth about how she became his grandmother, Ruth explains that her Christian mission was destroyed in a Japanese bombing raid, and that she was sent south with eight European children, entrusted with their safety. Along the way, they encountered a dying Chinese woman, and Ruth agreed to care for her child as well. Moved by her personal story and her beautiful singing voice, Tom is soon smitten with the young woman.",(1) Who is married to Scott?,(2) Who told Macreedy that Komoko is dead?,"(3) Who is married to the person that is ""born from death""?",(4) Who is told that there was an accident?,(5) Who is told that Ruth is married to the commodore?,5,Ruth. 001_232,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Alexander perhaps undercut his own rule by demonstrating signs of megalomania. While utilizing effective propaganda such as the cutting of the Gordian Knot, he also attempted to portray himself as a living god and son of Zeus following his visit to the oracle at Siwah in the Libyan Desert (in modern-day Egypt) in 331 BC. His attempt in 327 BC to have his men prostrate before him in Bactra in an act of proskynesis borrowed from the Persian kings was rejected as religious blasphemy by his Macedonian and Greek subjects after his court historian Callisthenes refused to perform this ritual. When Alexander had Parmenion murdered at Ecbatana (near modern Hamadan, Iran) in 330 BC, this was ""symptomatic of the growing gulf between the king's interests and those of his country and people"", according to Errington. His murder of Cleitus the Black in 328 BC is described as ""vengeful and reckless"" by Dawn L. Gilley and Ian Worthington. Continuing the polygamous habits of his father, Alexander encouraged his men to marry native women in Asia, leading by example when he wed Roxana, a Sogdian princess of Bactria. He then married Stateira II, eldest daughter of Darius III, and Parysatis II, youngest daughter of Artaxerxes III, at the Susa weddings in 324 BC.Meanwhile, in Greece, the Spartan king Agis III attempted to lead a rebellion of the Greeks against Macedonia. He was defeated in 331 BC at the Battle of Megalopolis by Antipater, who was serving as regent of Macedonia and deputy hegemon of the League of Corinth in Alexander's stead. Before Antipater embarked on his campaign in the Peloponnese, Memnon, the governor of Thrace, was dissuaded from rebellion by use of diplomacy. Antipater deferred the punishment of Sparta to the League of Corinth headed by Alexander, who ultimately pardoned the Spartans on the condition that they submit fifty nobles as hostages. Antipater's hegemony was somewhat unpopular in Greece due to his practice (perhaps by order of Alexander) of exiling malcontents and garrisoning cities with Macedonian troops, yet in 330 BC, Alexander declared that the tyrannies installed in Greece were to be abolished and Greek freedom was to be restored.",(1) What did Jeanne tell Paul before shooting him?,(2) When did Van Coehoorn refused Frederick of Prussia the position he offered him?,(3) Whose court historian refused to prostrate before him?,(4) What court held singer-lutenists before the Norman conquest?,(5) Whose reign did not include court presentations of young aristocratic ladies?,3,Gilley. 001_307,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Charismatic roving peddler Hank Martin falls in love at first sight with schoolteacher Verity Wade and soon marries her. On their wedding day, he rents a ramshackle home from his upper class lawyer friend Jules Bolduc. Hank rounds up some of his many friends to fix up the place, but Verity begins to realize that he is not as nice as he appears to be; while they do the work, he sees nothing wrong in going inside to read a law book. He confides to her that it is all a matter of manipulating people the right way. Jules invites the couple to dine with him that night, but Hank soon quarrels with another guest, Robert L. Castleberry IV. He accuses Castleberry, the owner of the company that buys cotton, of shortchanging the poor farmers. When Hank goes about his business, Verity accompanies him to the bayou. A young woman named Flamingo leaps into his arms, but when she learns that he is now married, she tries to arrange for an alligator to rid her of her rival. Verity is only injured. However, Flamingo does not give up on the man she has loved since she was a teen. After Hank sends Verity home to recover, Flamingo tracks Hank down on the road. She overcomes his resistance, and they start an affair. Hank sets out to prove that Castleberry is cheating. When Hank proves that the weights used are seriously inaccurate, one of Castleberry's men aims a rifle at one of Hank's followers, and is killed by farmer Jeb Brown.",(1) What is the full name of the man that accuses the owner of the cotton buying company of shortchanging farmers?,(2) What is the full name of the person that the club owner hire a hit man to kill?,(3) What is the full name of the real owner of the dress?,(4) What is the full name of the man that Married Caroline Gordon?,(5) What is the full name of the owner of the flat the spy visited?,1,Hank. 001_77,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," The second half of the 19th century has often been called the Heroic Age of Antarctic Exploration. The inhospitable and dangerous Arctic and Antarctic regions appealed powerfully to the imagination of the age, not as lands with their own ecologies and cultures, but as challenges to be conquered by technological ingenuity and manly daring. Salomon August Andrée shared these enthusiasms, and proposed a plan for letting the wind propel a hydrogen balloon from Svalbard across the Arctic Sea to the Bering Strait, to fetch up in Alaska, Canada, or Russia, and passing near or even right over the North Pole on the way. Andrée was an engineer at the patent office in Stockholm, with a passion for ballooning. He bought his own balloon, the Svea, in 1893 and made nine journeys with it, starting from Gothenburg or Stockholm and traveling a combined distance of 1,500 kilometres (930 mi). In the prevailing westerly winds, the Svea flights had a strong tendency to carry him uncontrollably out to the Baltic Sea and drag his basket perilously along the surface of the water or slam it into one of the many rocky islets in the Stockholm archipelago. On one occasion he was blown clear across the Baltic to Finland. His longest trip was due east from Gothenburg, across the breadth of Sweden and out over the Baltic to Gotland. Even though he saw a lighthouse and heard breakers off Öland, he remained convinced that he was traveling over land and seeing lakes.During a couple of Svea flights, Andrée tested and tried out the drag-rope steering technique which he had developed and wanted to use on his projected North Pole expedition. Drag ropes, which hang from the balloon basket and drag part of their length on the ground, are designed to counteract the tendency of lighter-than-air craft to travel at the same speed as the wind, a situation that makes steering by sails impossible. The friction of the ropes was intended to slow the balloon to the point where the sails would have an effect (beyond that of making the balloon rotate on its axis). Andrée reported, and presumably believed, that with drag rope/sails steering he had succeeded in deviating about ten degrees either way from the wind direction. This notion is rejected by modern balloonists; the Swedish Ballooning Association maintains that Andrée's belief that he had deviated from the wind was mistaken, being misled by inexpertise and a surfeit of enthusiasm in an environment of variable winds and poor visibility. Use of drag ropes—prone to snapping, falling off, or becoming entangled with each other or the ground, in addition to being ineffective—is not considered by any modern expert to be a useful steering technique.",(1) What is the full name of the mayor who died in office and was replaced in 1978?,(2) What was the full name of the person who was an engineer at the patent office in Stockholm?,(3) What was the full name of the person who was posing for Moore?,(4) What is the full name of the person who was an obvious choice as commander?,(5) What was the full name of the person who dies in 1927?,2,drag-rope steering technique. 001_6,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Philip Arnold Heseltine (30 October 1894 – 17 December 1930), known by the pseudonym Peter Warlock, was a British composer and music critic. The Warlock name, which reflects Heseltine's interest in occult practices, was used for all his published musical works. He is best known as a composer of songs and other vocal music; he also achieved notoriety in his lifetime through his unconventional and often scandalous lifestyle. As a schoolboy at Eton College, Heseltine met the British composer Frederick Delius, with whom he formed a close friendship. After a failed student career in Oxford and London, Heseltine turned to musical journalism, while developing interests in folk-song and Elizabethan music. His first serious compositions date from around 1915. Following a period of inactivity, a positive and lasting influence on his work arose from his meeting in 1916 with the Dutch composer Bernard van Dieren; he also gained creative impetus from a year spent in Ireland, studying Celtic culture and language. On his return to England in 1918, Heseltine began composing songs in a distinctive, original style, while building a reputation as a combative and controversial music critic. During 1920–21 he edited the music magazine The Sackbut. His most prolific period as a composer came in the 1920s, when he was based first in Wales and later at Eynsford in Kent. Through his critical writings, published under his own name, Heseltine made a pioneering contribution to the scholarship of early music. In addition, he produced a full-length biography of Frederick Delius and wrote, edited, or otherwise assisted the production of several other books and pamphlets. Towards the end of his life, Heseltine became depressed by a loss of his creative inspiration. He died in his London flat of coal gas poisoning in 1930, probably by his own hand.",(1) What is the last name of the person who is best known for his mid-period allegorical landscapes?,(2) What is the last name of the person who was employed as a court composer at Brunswick in 1694?,(3) What is the last name of the person who recorded several albums of original music?,(4) What is the last name of the person who took vocal lessons with J.E. Hutchinson?,(5) What is the last name of the person who is best known as a composer of songs and other vocal music?,5,Heseltine. 001_313,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Gabe Ryan is released from reform school and it taken to a new house by his sister Joy to start a new life where no one knows of his past. However, Gabe immediately joins a local gang, the Beale Street Termites, where he meets up with William Kroner, a local gangster. William accuses him of starting a fire at one of his properties, and Alfred Martino, the actual arsonist, uses this opportunity to frame Gabe for any fire. He decides to torch one of his apartment complexes so that he can collect the insurance money. Unfortunately, one of the kids, Sleepy is killed in the fire. Patrick Remson, the Assistant District Attorney, tries to prove Gabe's innocence. His motives are not only to prove Gabe's innocence, but also to get closer to his sister. Joy has devoted her life to helping Gabe and neglects her other interests, which was rallying against city government corruption, which pleases Martino. However, it is all for naught as Gabe is found guilty and sentenced to prison. The other boys, led by Billy, decide to do something to help Gabe. Billy runs for ""boy mayor"" and wins. He has Kroner arrested for a small infraction and sends him to jail. While there, Billy and the rest of the gang interrogate him and try to make him admit that Gabe is innocent. He does not cave in, that is until he is shown proof that his accomplices, Martino and the fire chief, are planning to skip the country. He confesses and Martino and the chief are arrested and sent to prison.",(1) What is the name of the person that kills the attorney of the person accused of espionage?,(2) What is the name of the person that Gabe's attorney wants to get closer to?,(3) What is the first name of the person that the arms dealer wants get revenge on?,(4) What is the real name of the person that Humbert wants to be close to?,(5) What's the full name of the person the young attorney is related to?,2,Joy. 001_131,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Elizabeth Masterson, a young emergency medicine physician whose work is her whole life, is in a serious car accident while on her way to a blind date. Three months later, David Abbott, a landscape architect recovering from the sudden death of his wife, moves into the apartment that had been Elizabeth's, after 'discovering' it in what seems to be a fateful happenstance. Elizabeth's spirit begins to appear to David in the apartment with ghostly properties and abilities that make it clear that something is not right. She can suddenly appear and disappear, walk or move through walls and objects, and once takes over his actions. When they meet, they are both surprised, as Elizabeth is still unaware of her recent history and refuses to think she is dead. David tries to have her spirit exorcised from the apartment, but to no avail. Since only David can see and hear her, others think that he is hallucinating and talking to himself. David and Elizabeth begin to bond, as much as that is possible, and he takes her out of town to a beautiful landscaped garden he designed. Elizabeth tells him she senses she has been there before, and in fact, the garden was something she was dreaming of in the opening scenes of the film, where she was awakened by a colleague from cat-napping after working a 23-hour shift in the hospital. Together, assisted by a psychic bookstore clerk, Darryl, Elizabeth and David find out who she is, what happened to her, and why they are connected. She is not dead, but in a coma, her body being kept on life support at the hospital where she used to work. When David discovers that in accordance with her living will, she will soon be allowed to die, he tries to prevent this by telling Elizabeth's sister, Abby, that he can see her and what the situation involves. One of Elizabeth's young nieces is revealed to be able to sense her presence as well.",(1) What is the profession of the person that sees Elizabeth's spirit?,(2) What is the profession of the person who sold Hercules?,(3) What is Rocky's animal spirit?,(4) What is the first name of the person that sees Carl's truck outside the ballet?,(5) What is the profession of the person that Pete Sandidge is in love with?,1,Abby. 001_264,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," In 1969, American rock musician Jimi Hendrix, who was then at the height of his career, was arrested, tried, and acquitted in Canada for drug possession. On May 3, 1969, customs agents at Toronto International Airport detained Hendrix after finding a small amount of what they suspected to be heroin and hashish in his luggage. Four hours later, after a mobile lab confirmed what had been found, he was formally charged with drug possession. Released on $10,000 bail, Hendrix was required to return on May 5 for an arraignment hearing. During a performance at Maple Leaf Gardens later that night, he displayed a jovial attitude, joking with the audience and singing a few lines of mock opera for comedic effect. At a preliminary hearing on June 19, Judge Robert Taylor set a date for December 8, at which Hendrix would stand trial for two counts of illegal possession of narcotics, for which he faced as many as 20 years in prison. While there was no question as to whether the drugs were in Hendrix's luggage, in order for the Crown to prove possession they had to show that he knew they were there. In his cross-examination of Canadian customs officials, defense attorney John O'Driscoll raised doubts about whether the narcotics belonged to Hendrix, who had no drug paraphernalia in his luggage or needle tracks on his arms. After a trial that lasted for three days, the jury deliberated for 8 hours before returning a not guilty verdict, acquitting Hendrix of both charges. The incident proved stressful for Hendrix, and it weighed heavily on his mind during the seven months that he awaited trial. Two weeks after the arrest, he told his friend, journalist Sharon Lawrence, that his fear of needles discouraged him from using heroin and that associating with junkies had convinced him it was not a drug he wanted to use. Both of Hendrix's Experience bandmates, Mitch Mitchell and Noel Redding, later stated that they had been warned about a planned drug bust the day before flying to Toronto and they believed that drugs had been planted in Hendrix's bag. Although Hendrix was one of the biggest stars in North America at the time, and the world's highest-paid performer, only a couple of Toronto newspapers carried the story. His public relations manager, Michael Goldstein, later revealed that he bribed a member of the Associated Press with a case of liquor in an effort to prevent the story from going out on the news wire.",(1) What is the name for a person who is a member of the Church of England?,(2) What is the last name of the public relations manager that revealed he bribed a member of the Associated Press to prevent a story about the man who was arrested for drug possession?,(3) How many times was Turner arrested for cocaine possession?,(4) What is the last name of the man who took pictures of a dancing member of the band that had its distribution done by Elektra?,(5) What is the full name of the man who replaced the manager that was accused of sexual assault?,2,Michael Goldstein. 001_123,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," One day, Molly Standing is picking apples in her father's apple orchard in California, with her friend Gertie, when they meet two boys, Tommy Melville and Gus Schultz. Molly falls in love with Tommy while Gertie falls in love with Gus. They plan a double wedding. Gerald Winters and his mother, who are wealthy art patrons, hear Molly singing, and, at Gerald's suggestion, since he is very attracted to her, they sponsor her to study in Italy. Molly is reluctant to go but finally accepts when she discovers her father is in need of money. She leaves on the day that Tommy had hoped would be their wedding day. He says goodbye to her before attending Gertie and Gus's wedding ceremony. Molly becomes a success in Rome. She returns to the United States to sing at the Metropolitan Opera House in New York City, where she is again a great success. After the performance, Tommy attends the party which has been given by Gerald and his mother. Molly asks Tommy to sing, but her society friends do not think much of his singing. Realizing that Molly now lives in a world far apart from his, Tommy breaks off his engagement and returns to the orchards. Molly stays in New York for two years and then moves on to San Francisco for a concert stop. Although she is supposed to marry Gerald soon, she is unhappy. She goes to her father's orchards to visit her old friend Gertie, to see how things are going with her. She happens to run into Tommy, and they rekindle their love and are married. Before they leave on their honeymoon, the doctor informs Molly's manager and Tommy that Schilling has lost her voice and will never sing again, except perhaps, a lullaby.",(1) What is the full name of the person who mocks someone?,(2) What is the full name of the person who drugs someone?,(3) What is the first name of the person who is very attracted to someone?,(4) What is the first name of the person who is rescued from humiliation by someone?,(5) What is the first name of the person who stopped himself from punching someone?,3,Gerald. 001_418,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Edward Dalyngrigge was a younger son and thus deprived of his father's estates through the practice of primogeniture, hence he had to make his own fortunes. By 1378, he owned the manor of Bodiam by marrying into a land-owning family. From 1379 to 1388, Dalyngrigge was a Knight of the Shire for Sussex and one of the most influential people in the county. By the time he applied to the king for a licence to crenellate (build a castle), the Hundred Years' War had been fought between England and France for nearly 50 years. Edward III of England (reigned 1327–1377) pressed his claim for the French throne and secured the territories of Aquitaine and Calais. Dalyngrigge was one of many Englishmen who travelled to France to seek their fortune as members of Free Companies – groups of mercenaries who fought for the highest bidder. He left for France in 1367 and journeyed with Lionel, Duke of Clarence and son of Edward III. After fighting under the Earl of Arundel, Dalyngrigge joined the company of Sir Robert Knolles, a notorious commander who was reputed to have made 100,000 gold crowns as a mercenary from pillage and plunder. It was as a member of the Free Companies that Dalyngrigge raised the money to build Bodiam Castle; he returned to England in 1377.The Treaty of Bruges (1375) ensured peace for two years, but after it expired, fighting resumed between England and France. In 1377 Edward III was succeeded by Richard II. During the war, England and France struggled for control of the English Channel, with raids on both coasts. With the renewed hostilities, Parliament voted that money should be spent on defending and fortifying England's south coast, and defences were erected in Kent in anticipation of a French invasion. There was internal unrest as well as external threats, and Dalyngrigge was involved in suppressing the Peasants' Revolt of 1381. The manor of Bodiam was granted a charter in 1383 permitting a weekly market and an annual fair to be held. In 1385, a fleet of 1,200 ships – variously cogs, barges, and galleys – gathered across the English Channel at Sluys, Flanders; the population of southern England was in a state of panic. Later in the year, Edward Dalyngrigge was granted a licence to fortify his manor house.",(1) What is the last name of the person who got attacked by his own traps?,(2) What is the last name of the person who published under his own name?,(3) What is the last name of the person who positioned his own army between the Franks and Mongols?,(4) What is the last name of the person who wants to his daughter to have her own pony?,(5) What is the last name of the person who had to make his own fortunes?,5,Dalyngrigge. 001_339,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Hotel. Running from October 2015 to January 2016, Hotel is the fifth season of the television anthology horror series, American Horror Story, in which Gaga played a hotel owner named Elizabeth. At the 73rd Golden Globe Awards, Gaga received the Best Actress in a Miniseries or Television Film award for her work on the season. She appeared in Nick Knight's 2015 fashion film for Tom Ford's 2016 spring campaign and was guest editor for V fashion magazine's 99th issue in January 2016, which featured 16 different covers. She received Editor of the Year award at the Fashion Los Angeles Awards.","(1) What is the name of the person who co-wrote the song ""Til It Happens to You"" with Diane Warren?","(2) What are the names of the two people who co-wrote the song ""(She Can) Do That""?",(3) What are the names of the two people who co-wrote the song Til It Happens to You?,"(4) Who wrote the song ""I Honestly Love You"" (1974)?","(5) who co-wrote the hit song ""on and on"" in 1984?",1,Gaga. 001_94,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Hundreds of songs and performers have entered Melodifestivalen since its debut. Although songwriters living outside Sweden were once not allowed to enter Melodifestivalen, the 2012 contest marked the first time foreign songwriters could submit entries, provided that they collaborated with a Swedish songwriter. To be eligible, songwriters and performers must be at least sixteen years of age on the day of the first Eurovision semi-final.Until 2001, participation in the festival was limited to a single night. The number of contestants ranged from five to twelve. A two-round system was used intermittently between 1981 and 1998, in which all but five of the contestants were eliminated in a first round of voting. Failure to reach the second round under this system was seen as a major failure for a prominent artist; when Elisabeth Andreassen failed to qualify in 1984, it almost ended her career. The introduction of weekly semi-finals in 2002 increased the number of contestants to thirty-two. At least ten of the contestants must perform in Swedish. A CD of each year's competing songs has been released since 2001, and a DVD of the semi-finals and final since 2003. Melodifestivalen has been the launch-pad for the success of popular local acts, such as Anne-Lie Rydé, Tommy Körberg, and Lisa Nilsson. The competition has played host to performers from outside Sweden, including Baccara, Alannah Myles, Katrina Leskanich, and Cornelis Vreeswijk. Melodifestivalen participants have also represented—and unsuccessfully tried to represent—other countries at Eurovision. While local success for Melodifestivalen winners is common, most contestants return to obscurity and few have major international success. The impact that the competition makes on the Swedish charts means an artist need not win the competition to earn significant domestic record sales. For example, the song which finished last at Melodifestivalen 1990, ""Symfonin"" by Loa Falkman, topped the Swedish singles chart. The most recent occurrence was 2016 with Samir & Viktor's song ""Bada Nakna"". In 2007, twenty-one participants reached Sverigetopplistan. The week after the 2008 final, songs from the festival made up the entire top fifteen on the domestic singles chart.",(1) Elisabeth Andreassen's career almost ended when she failed to qualify for what contest?,"(2) After Anita left her home, what career did she pursue?",(3) Burke failed to show concern for what sect of Christianity?,(4) How old was Elisabeth and Fritzl when Elisabeth was taken?,(5) who failed to qualify for euro2016?,1,2008. 001_354,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Before dawn on September 13, 1964, the ruling military junta of South Vietnam, led by General Nguyễn Khánh, was threatened by a coup attempt headed by Generals Lâm Văn Phát and Dương Văn Đức, who sent dissident units into the capital Saigon. They captured various key points and announced over national radio the overthrow of the incumbent regime. With the help of the Americans, Khánh was able to rally support and the coup collapsed the next morning without any casualties. In the immediate month leading up the coup, Khánh's leadership had become increasingly troubled. He had tried to augment his powers by declaring a state of emergency, but this only provoked large-scale protests and riots calling for an end to military rule, with Buddhist activists at the forefront. Fearful of losing power, Khánh began making concessions to the protesters and promised democracy in the near future. He also removed several military officials closely linked to the discriminatory Catholic rule of the slain former President Ngô Đình Diệm; this response to Buddhist pressure dismayed several Catholic officers, who made a few abortive moves to remove him from power. In part because of pressure from Buddhist protests, Khánh removed the Catholics Phát and Đức from the posts of Interior Minister and IV Corps commander, respectively. They responded with a coup supported by the Catholic-aligned Đại Việt Quốc dân đảng, as well as General Trần Thiện Khiêm, a Catholic who had helped Khánh to power. Having captured the radio station, Phát then made a broadcast promising to revive Diệm's policies. Khánh managed to evade capture and, during the first stage of the coup, there was little activity as most senior officers failed to support either side. Throughout the day, Khánh gradually rallied more allies and the U.S. remained supportive of his rule and pressured the rebels to give up. With the backing of Air Marshal Nguyễn Cao Kỳ, commander of the Republic of Vietnam Air Force, and General Nguyễn Chánh Thi, Khánh was able to force Phát and Đức to capitulate the next morning, September 14. Đức, Kỳ and Thi then appeared at a media conference where they denied that any coup had taken place and put on a choreographed display of unity, claiming that nobody would be prosecuted over the events.",(1) What was the first name of the person who was able to rally support and the coup collapsed the next morning without any casualties?,(2) What was the first name of the person who was murdered?,(3) What is the first name of the person who collapsed in front of Helen's car?,(4) What is the first name of the person who was able to separate uranium-235?,(5) What is the first name of the person who was a longtime support of Hitler?,1,Lâm Văn Phát. 001_367,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Marcus Templeton is a thirty-year-old, unmarried security guard who describes himself as ""a lonely, desperate man."" He works at night and spends his days looking at pornography and takes to peeping into windows in the hopes of seeing naked women. Marcus is slightly overweight and spends a fair amount of screen time obsessing about his physical health, finally resorting to wearing a corset and using questionable weight-loss products such as Reduce-O-Creme, which promises to ""melt, melt, melt your fat away"" upon application. After several disastrous attempts at dating women, Marcus resorts to seeing prostitutes. He begins to secretly record his encounters with the call girls, first with a small tape recorder and then with a hidden video camera. He quickly spends his entire life savings and contracts sexually transmitted diseases, all the while losing his grip on reality (his father ""appears"" on the television screen and berates Marcus). When a disagreeable prostitute discovers she is being surreptitiously videotaped, she pulls a handgun out of her purse, shoots Marcus and steals his video equipment. As Marcus lies bleeding to death he grabs the nearby bottle of Reduce-O-Creme and applies it to his belly in a final, futile gesture.",(1) What is the first name of the person whose mother works at the chicken shack?,(2) What is the first name of the person who works as a chauffeur?,(3) What is the full name of the person who works for the young doctor at Bidnold?,(4) What is the first name of the person who works at night?,(5) What is the first name of the person who composed major works for the organ?,4,Marcus. 001_416,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," ""you must study the French language in depth; it is indispensable."" Most of the mélodies are written for piano accompaniment, but a few, including ""Le lever du soleil sur le Nil"" (""Sunrise over the Nile"", 1898) and ""Hymne à la paix"" (""Hymn to Peace"", 1919), are for voice and orchestra. His settings, and chosen verses, are generally traditional in form, contrasting with the free verse and less structured forms of a later generation of French composers, including Debussy.Saint-Saëns composed more than sixty sacred vocal works, ranging from motets to masses and oratorios. Among the larger-scale compositions are the Requiem (1878) and the oratorios Le déluge (1875) and The Promised Land (1913) with an English text by Herman Klein. He was proud of his connection with British choirs, commenting, ""One likes to be appreciated in the home, par excellence, of oratorio."" He wrote a smaller number of secular choral works, some for unaccompanied choir, some with piano accompaniment and some with full orchestra. In his choral works, Saint-Saëns drew heavily on tradition, feeling that his models should be Handel, Mendelssohn and other earlier masters of the genre. In Klein's view, this approach was old-fashioned, and the familiarity of Saint-Saëns's treatment of the oratorio form impeded his success in it.",(1) What are the names of the two people who were to be executed?,(2) What were the names of Alaungpaya's two sons?,(3) What were the names of the two people who needed to be rescued?,"(4) What were the names of the two people, who unlike Saint-Saëns, were drawn to the song cycle?",(5) What were the last names of the two people who were enemy aliens?,4,Le lever du soleil sur le Nil. 001_387,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," The film tells a fictionalized version of the Pilgrims' voyage across the Atlantic Ocean to North America aboard the Mayflower. During the long sea voyage, Capt. Christopher Jones falls in love with Dorothy Bradford, the wife of William Bradford. The love triangle is resolved in a tragic way at the film's conclusion. Ship's carpenter John Alden -- said to be the first person to set foot on Plymouth Rock in 1620—catches the eye of Priscilla Mullins, one of the young Pilgrims following William Bradford. Alden ultimately wins Priscilla in another, if subtler, triangle with Miles Standish. Lloyd Bridges provides comic relief as the first-mate Coppin, and child star Tommy Ivo gives a touching performance as young William Button, the only passenger to die on the actual voyage across the storm-swept Atlantic, who, according to this film, wanted to be the first to sight land and to become a king in the New World. ""I'm going to be the first to see land. Keep me eye peeled, I will. Then I'll be the first. It'll be like the Garden of Eden and I'm going to be the first to see it"".",(1) What does Tommy Ivo's character compare North America to?,(2) What baseline do they compare to?,(3) What models do they compare to?,(4) What does Yuri compare the need for weapons to?,"(5) What does Socrates compare ""creating a word"" to?",1,Alden. 001_248,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Five of the people involved in the incident were sentenced in mid-2001. Although the official Xinhua news agency had described the proceedings as a ""public trial,"" only the final day in the month-long trial was public, and consisted mainly of the reading of verdicts. The Guardian reported that on the last day of the one-month trial, Xinhua had, by mid-morning, issued a full report of the verdicts; the People's Daily had produced its own editorial by the afternoon.Liu Yunfang, named as the mastermind, was given a life sentence; Wang Jindong was given 15 years. Two other accomplices – a 49-year-old man named Xue Hongjun, and a 34-year-old Beijing woman named Liu Xiuqin who apparently provided the group with lodging and helped in the preparation of the incident – were sentenced to 10 and 7 years in prison respectively. Liu Baorong, who had ""acknowledged her crime"", escaped punishment because her role in planning the event was minor.After having denied foreign media access to the self-immolation victims for the previous year, in April 2002 the government arranged for foreign press to interview the purported survivors of the self-immolation in the presence of state officials. The interviewees refuted claims that the self-immolation was staged, showing their burn injuries as evidence, and denounced Falun Gong while expressing support for the authorities' handling of the group. When asked why they set themselves on fire, Hao Huijun replied that she had realized the futility of writing letters and demonstrating by waving banners, ""so finally, we decided ... to make a big event to show our will to the world. ... We wanted to show the government that Falun Gong was good."" At the time of the interview, Chen Guo and her mother were said to still be in the hospital, both having lost their hands, ears and noses. Both her mother's eyes were covered with skin grafts. Wang Jindong, showing burns to his face, said he felt ""humiliated because of my stupidity and fanatical ideas."".",(1) What are the full names of the people who were influenced by Saint-Saëns?,(2) What are the full names of the five people involved in the incident who were sentenced in mid-2001?,(3) What were the full names of the two people who died in prison?,(4) What are the full names of the people in the passage who died?,(5) What were the names of the five people who chose the TNT?,2,Liu Yunfang. 001_437,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," After selecting the music by Alexandrov for the national anthem, Stalin needed new lyrics. He thought that the song was short and, because of the Great Patriotic War, that it needed a statement about the impending defeat of Germany by the Red Army. The poets Sergey Mikhalkov and Gabriel El-Registan were called to Moscow by one of Stalin's staffers, and were told to fix the lyrics to Alexandrov's music. They were instructed to keep the verses the same, but to find a way to change the refrains which described ""a Country of Soviets"". Because of the difficulty of expressing the concepts of the Great Patriotic War in song, that idea was dropped from the version which El-Registan and Mikhalkov completed overnight. After a few minor changes to emphasize the Russian Motherland, Stalin approved the anthem and had it published on 7 November 1943, including a line about Stalin ""inspir[ing] us to keep the faith with the people"". The revised anthem was announced to all of the USSR on January 1, 1944 and became official on March 15, 1944.After Stalin's death in 1953, the Soviet government examined his legacy. The government began the de-Stalinization process, which included downplaying the role of Stalin and moving his corpse from Lenin's Mausoleum to the Kremlin Wall Necropolis. In addition, the anthem lyrics composed by Mikhalkov and El-Registan were officially scrapped by the Soviet government in 1956. The anthem was still used by the Soviet government, but without any official lyrics. In private, this anthem became known the ""Song Without Words"". Mikhalkov wrote a new set of lyrics in 1970, but they were not submitted to the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet until May 27, 1977. The new lyrics, which eliminated any mention of Stalin, were approved on 1 September, and were made official with the printing of the new Soviet Constitution in October 1977. In the credits for the 1977 lyrics, Mikhalkov was mentioned, but references to El-Registan, who died in 1945, were dropped for unknown reasons.",(1) What is the last name of the person that Rhodes assists to defeat the miners?,(2) What is the first name of the person who was a Russian cultural ambassador to Weimar Germany?,(3) What is the last name of the person whose statement was broadcast that evening?,(4) What is the full name of the person that wanted to commit suicide?,(5) What is the name of the person that wanted to add a statement about the impending defeat of Germany?,5,"""Song Without Words""." 001_180,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Talcott Williams (1849–1928), Benjamin Fox (c. 1865 – c. 1900), J. Laurie Wallace (1864–1953), Jesse Godley (1862–1889), Harry the dog (Eakins' Irish Setter, c. 1880–90), George Reynolds (c. 1839–89), and Eakins himself. The rocky promontory on which several of the men rest is the foundation of the Mill Creek mill, which was razed in 1873. It is the only sign of civilization in the work—no shoes, clothes, or bath houses are visible. The foliage in the background provides a dark background against which the swimmers' skin tones contrast. The positioning of the bodies and their musculature refers to classical ideals of physical beauty and masculine camaraderie evocative of Greek art. The reclining figure is a paraphrase of the Dying Gaul, and is juxtaposed with the far less formal self-depiction by the artist. It is possible that Eakins was seeking to reconcile an ancient theme with a modern interpretation; the subject was contemporary, but the poses of some of the figures recall those of classical sculpture. One possible influence by a contemporary source was Scène d'été, painted in 1869 by Frédéric Bazille (1841–70). It is not unlikely that Eakins saw the painting at the Salon while studying in Paris, and would have been sympathetic to its depiction of male bathers in a modern setting.In Eakins' oeuvre, The Swimming Hole was immediately preceded by a number of similar works on the Arcadian theme. These correspond to lectures he gave on Ancient Greek sculpture and were inspired by the Pennsylvania Academy's casts of Phidias' Pan-Athenaic procession from the Parthenon marbles. A series of photographs, relief sculptures, and oil sketches culminated in the 1883 Arcadia, a painting that also featured nude figures—posed for by a student, a nephew, and the artist's fiancée—in a pastoral landscape.",(1) What is the name of the person that painted Las Meninas?,(2) Who painted The Old Guitarist during his blue period?,(3) What was the name of the person that painted The Old Swimming Hole?,(4) What was the first name of the person who titled the painting The Old Swimming Hole?,(5) What was the name that Susan Macdowell Eakins changed the name of the painting before it was titled The Old Swimming Hole?,3,Scène d'été. 001_162,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," In 1978, con artists Irving Rosenfeld and Sydney Prosser have started a relationship, and are working together. Sydney has improved Rosenfeld's scams, posing as English aristocrat ""Lady Edith Greensly"". Irving loves Sydney, but is hesitant to leave his unstable wife Rosalyn, fearing he will lose contact with his adopted son Danny. Rosalyn has also threatened to report Irving to the police if he leaves her. FBI agent Richie DiMaso catches Irving and Sydney in a loan scam, but offers to release them if Irving can line up four additional arrests. Richie believes Sydney is English, but has proof that her claim of aristocracy is fraudulent. Sydney tells Irving she will manipulate Richie, distancing herself from Irving. Irving has a friend pretending to be a wealthy Arab sheikh looking for potential investments in America. An associate of Irving's suggests the sheikh do business with Mayor Carmine Polito of Camden, New Jersey, who is campaigning to revitalize gambling in Atlantic City, but has struggled in fund-raising. Carmine seems to have a genuine desire to help the area's economy and his constituents. Richie devises a plan to make Mayor Polito the target of a sting operation, despite the objections of Irving and of Richie's boss, Stoddard Thorsen. Sydney helps Richie manipulate an FBI secretary into making an unauthorized wire transfer of $2,000,000. When Stoddard's boss, Anthony Amado, hears of the operation, he praises Richie's initiative, pressuring Stoddard to continue.",(1) Who is the boss of Richie's boss?,(2) Who is Rick's boss?,(3) Who is Fabio's boss?,(4) Who is Sidney's boss?,(5) Who is Madison's boss?,1,a wealthy Arab sheikh. 001_316,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," In ancient times, the Amazons, a proud and fierce race of warrior women, led by their Queen, Hippolyta, battled Ares, the god of war, and his army. During the battle, Hippolyta specifically targeted and beheaded her son Thrax, whom Ares forcibly conceived with her and who is fighting for his father. Hippolyta then defeated Ares, but Zeus stopped her from delivering the death strike. Instead, Hera bound his powers with magic bracers so that he was deprived of his ability to draw power from the psychic aura of violence and death he could instigate, and only another god could release him. In compensation, the Amazons were granted the island of Themyscira, where they would remain eternally youthful and isolated from Man in the course of their duty of holding Ares prisoner for all eternity. Later, Hippolyta was granted a daughter, Princess Diana, whom she shaped from the sand of the Themyscirian seashore and gave life with her own blood. Over a millennium later, an American fighter pilot, USAF Colonel Steve Trevor, is shot down in a dogfight and crash-lands his YF-23 on the island, where he soon runs afoul of the Amazon population, including the combative Artemis. Steve and Diana meet and fight, and Diana defeats him, taking him to the Amazons. After interrogating him with the use of the Amazons' golden lasso, Hippolyta decides he is not an enemy of the Amazons and as such, tradition dictates that an emissary be tasked to ensure his safe return to his own country. Diana volunteers, but is assigned to guard Ares's cell instead since her mother argues that she has not enough experience in dealing with the dangers of the outside world. Diana defies her mother and, her face hidden by a helmet and her guard duty covered by her bookish but kind-hearted Amazon sister Alexa, participates in contests of strength and wins the right to take Trevor back to his home.",(1) What was the last name of the person who was impressed with Deal's ability to move from bass to guitar?,(2) What is the full name of the person who has the ability to control other people's minds?,(3) What is the name of the person who was blinded for his troubles?,(4) What is the last name of the person who became well respected for his ability to capture flesh tones accurate in painting?,(5) What is the name of the person who was deprived of his ability to draw power?,5,Steve. 001_143,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," if a person struck what appeared to be a slave in Athens, that person might find himself hitting a fellow-citizen, because many citizens dressed no better. It astonished other Greeks that Athenians tolerated back-chat from slaves. Athenian slaves fought together with Athenian freemen at the battle of Marathon, and the monuments memorialize them. It was formally decreed before the battle of Salamis that the citizens should ""save themselves, their women, children, and slaves"".Slaves had special sexual restrictions and obligations. For example, a slave could not engage free boys in pederastic relationships (""A slave shall not be the lover of a free boy nor follow after him, or else he shall receive fifty blows of the public lash.""), and they were forbidden from the palaestrae (""A slave shall not take exercise or anoint himself in the wrestling-schools.""). Both laws are attributed to Solon. Fathers wanting to protect their sons from unwanted advances provided them with a slave guard, called a paidagogos, to escort the boy in his travels. The sons of vanquished foes would be enslaved and often forced to work in male brothels, as in the case of Phaedo of Elis, who at the request of Socrates was bought and freed from such an enterprise by the philosopher's rich friends. On the other hand, it is attested in sources that the rape of slaves was prosecuted, at least occasionally.",(1) What is the law of man a key dimension of?,(2) What caused many men to free slaves from 1782 to 1810?,(3) What is the name of the man who put forth a law preventing slaves from engaging free boys in pederastic relationships?,(4) What is important in preventing heat loss from the body?,(5) What is the full name of the character who ministered to slaves in his area?,3,Solon. 001_191,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," In support of Nine Inch Nails' third full-length studio album, The Fragile, the live-band reformed for the Fragility tour. The lineup remained largely the same from the Self-Destruct tour, featuring Finck, Clouser, and Lohner. To replace long-time member Vrenna, Reznor held open auditions to find a new drummer, eventually picking then-unknown Jerome Dillon. Dillon would remain a member of the live band until 2005. Nine Inch Nails' record label at the time, Interscope Records, reportedly refused to fund the promotional tour following The Fragile's lukewarm sales. Reznor instead committed himself to fund the entire tour out of his own pocket, concluding that ""The reality is, I’m broke at the end of the tour,"" but also adding ""I will never present a show that isn’t fantastic.""The Fragility tour began in late 1999, running until mid-2000, and was broken into two major legs, Fragility 1.0 and Fragility 2.0 respectively. Destinations included Europe, Japan, New Zealand, Australia, and North America. Before the first Fragility performance date in Spain, Nine Inch Nails opened their final rehearsal in London to 100 fans. Kick-starting the tour was a performance of the title track from The Fragile at the MTV Video Music Awards. Atari Teenage Riot opened for Nine Inch Nails during Fragility 1.0, and A Perfect Circle for Fragility 2.0. At the time, A Perfect Circle featured Josh Freese on drums, who would later replace Dillon and play drums for Nine Inch Nails from 2005 to 2007. The tour featured increasingly large production values, including a triptych video display created by contemporary video artist Bill Viola. Rolling Stone magazine named Fragility the best tour of 2000.In 2002, the tour documentary And All That Could Have Been was released featuring a collection of performances from the Fragility 2.0 tour. While making the DVD, Reznor commented on the tour in retrospect by saying ""I thought the show was really, really good when we were doing it"", but later admitted that he ""can't watch [the DVD] at all. I was sick for most of that tour and I really don't think it was Nine Inch Nails at its best"".",(1) What was the name of the band that went on the Self-Destruct tour?,(2) What was the name of Beyoncé's first international tour?,(3) What was the name of Minogue's first tour?,(4) What was the name of the drummer on the Self-Destruct tour?,(5) What is the name of the drummer that initially replaced the drummer who suffered a cardiac issue?,4,Reznor. 001_140,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," ""Déjà Vu"" debuted to mixed and positive reviews among critics. Mike Joseph of the international webzine PopMatters' believed that it was ""fantastic to hear Beyoncé singing her lungs out over a full-bodied groove featuring live instruments"". Spence D. of IGN Music, a multimedia news and reviews website, complimented Jerkins' bass-laden groove, writing that it brought the track to perfection. Describing ""Déjà Vu"" as a magnificent song, Caroline Sullivan of The Guardian complimented Beyoncé and Jay-Z collaboration calling it ""feverish as pre-watershed pop gets"". She added that even though when Jay-Z is not physically present, he manages to bring out something formidable in Beyoncé that evokes ""the young, feral Tina Turner"". Bernard Zuel The Sydney Morning Herald praised the assertiveness with which Beyoncé delivers her lines and considered buying ""Déjà Vu"" as worthwhile.Several other music critics have compared ""Déjà Vu"" to Beyoncé's 2003 single, ""Crazy in Love"", the lead single of her debut album. According to Gail Mitchell of Billboard magazine, the song is viewed by many as a sequel to ""Crazy in Love"". Jason King of the Vibe magazine deemed the song as ""cloned from the DNA of the raucous 'Crazy in Love'"" while Thomas Inskeep of Stylus Magazine referred to it as ""'Crazy in Love' lite"". Some reviewers, however, were negative to the parallels drawn between the two songs. Andy Kellman of AllMusic, an online music database, wrote that ""['Déjà Vu'] ""had the audacity to not be as monstrous as 'Crazy in Love'"", referring to the commercial success the latter experienced in 2003. The internet-based publication Pitchfork's writer Ryan Dombal claimed that ""this time [Beyoncé] out-bolds the beat"".Sasha Frere-Jones of The New Yorker deemed the lyrics as a ""perplexing view of memory"", while Chris Richards of The Washington Post characterized Beyoncé as a ""love-dazed girlfriend"" in the song. Jody Rosen of the Entertainment Weekly referred to ""Déjà Vu"" as an ""oddly flat"" choice as a lead single. Jaime Gill of Yahoo! Music regarded ""Déjà Vu"" as a good choice for a single but concluded that it does lack ""the kind of killer chorus"" to suggest that Beyoncé would take one further step ""to outright global domination"". On the other hand, Jon Pareles of The New York Times wrote that Jay-Z shows up ""as calmly boastful as ever"" in the song but he only makes Beyoncé's ""sound more insecure"". Kelefa Sanneh of the same publication noted that ""the refrain doesn't give Beyoncé a chance really to show off"" and further described the song as a ""fair-to-middling single from a singer who is the opposite of desperate"".",(1) How many consoles did Edge compare?,(2) who is beyond compare?,(3) name a body part that many songs mention.,(4) What type of music did critics associate with corrupt high culture?,(5) What is the name of the two songs that many music critics compare?,5,Crazy in Love. 001_206,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," William Etty was born in 1787 in York, the son of a miller and baker. He showed artistic promise from an early age, but his family were financially insecure, and at the age of 12 he left school to become an apprentice printer in Hull. On completing his seven-year indenture he moved to London ""with a few pieces of chalk-crayons in colours"", with the aim of emulating the Old Masters and becoming a history painter. Etty gained acceptance to the Royal Academy Schools in early 1807. After a year spent studying under renowned portrait painter Thomas Lawrence, Etty returned to the Royal Academy, drawing at the life class and copying other paintings. In 1821 the Royal Academy exhibited one of Etty's works, The Arrival of Cleopatra in Cilicia (also known as The Triumph of Cleopatra). The painting was extremely well received, and many of Etty's fellow artists greatly admired him. He was elected a full Royal Academician in 1828, ahead of John Constable. He became well respected for his ability to capture flesh tones accurately in painting and for his fascination with contrasts in skin tones. Following the exhibition of Cleopatra, Etty attempted to reproduce its success, concentrating on painting further history paintings containing nude figures. He exhibited 15 paintings at the Summer Exhibition in the 1820s (including Cleopatra), and all but one contained at least one nude figure. In so doing Etty became the first English artist to treat nude studies as a serious art form in their own right, capable of being aesthetically attractive and of delivering moral messages. Although some nudes by foreign artists were held in private English collections, Britain had no tradition of nude painting, and the display and distribution of nude material to the public had been suppressed since the 1787 Proclamation for the Discouragement of Vice. The supposed prurient reaction of the lower classes to his nude paintings caused concern throughout the 19th century. Many critics condemned his repeated depictions of female nudity as indecent, although his portraits of male nudes were generally well received. (Etty's male nude portraits were primarily of mythological heroes and classical combat, genres in which the depiction of male nudity was considered acceptable in England.) From 1832 onwards, needled by repeated attacks from the press, Etty remained a prominent painter of nudes but made conscious efforts to try to reflect moral lessons in his work.",(1) What is the last name of the person whose chancellor was Marigliani?,(2) What is the last name of the person whose family was financially insecure?,(3) What is the first name of the person whose family name needed restoring?,(4) What is the last name of the person whose family is falling apart?,(5) What is the full name of the person whose family was killed?,2,Etty. 001_165,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Gloria Wandrous wakes up in the apartment of wealthy executive Weston Liggett and finds that he has left her $250. An insulted Gloria, whose dress is torn, takes Liggett's wife Emily's (Dina Merrill) mink coat to cover herself and scrawls ""No Sale"" in lipstick on the mirror, but she orders her telephone answering service, BUtterfield 8, to put Liggett through if he calls. Gloria visits a childhood friend, pianist Steve Carpenter, who chastises her for wasting her life on one-night stands but agrees to ask his girlfriend Norma to lend her a dress. Gloria leaves, and Norma tells Steve to choose between her and Gloria. Liggett takes a train to the countryside where his wife Emily is caring for her mother. A friend, Bingham Smith, advises him to end his adulterous relationships and return to Bing's law firm instead of working for the chemical business of Emily's father. Meanwhile, Gloria lies to her mother Annie, claiming to have spent the night at Norma's. Liggett returns home. Finding the lipstick and money, he phones Gloria to explain the money was meant for her to buy a new dress, to replace the one that he had torn. While drinking later that night, Liggett advises her to ask a high price for her lovemaking talents. She insists she does not take payment from her dates and claims she has been hired as a model to advertise the dress she is wearing at three bistros that night. Liggett follows Gloria, watching her flirt with dozens of men at several clubs. He then drives her to a run-down motel. After sleeping together, Liggett and Gloria decide to explore their relationship further. Together for five days, they grow closer, falling genuinely in love with one another and parting only upon the return of Liggett's wife.",(1) What is the full name of the person who has a friend named Susan?,(2) What is the full name of the man who has a friend named Bingham Smith?,(3) What is the full name of the person who has a girlfriend named Nedra?,(4) What is the full name of the person who has a friend named Rachel?,(5) What is the full name of the person who has a wife named Lisa?,2,Gloria Wandrous. 001_467,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Hulagu died in 1265, and was succeeded by Abaqa (1234–1282), who further pursued Western cooperation. Though a Buddhist, upon his succession he married Maria Palaiologina, an Orthodox Christian and the illegitimate daughter of the Byzantine Emperor Michael VIII Palaiologos. Abaqa corresponded with Pope Clement IV through 1267 and 1268, sending envoys to both Clement and King James I of Aragon. In a 1268 message to Clement, Abaqa promised to send troops to aid the Christians. It is unclear if this was what led to James's unsuccessful expedition to Acre in 1269. James initiated a small crusade, but a storm descended on his fleet as they attempted their crossing, forcing most of the ships to turn back. The crusade was ultimately handled by James's two sons Fernando Sanchez and Pedro Fernandez, who arrived in Acre in December 1269. Abaqa, despite his earlier promises of assistance, was in the process of facing another threat, an invasion in Khorasan by Mongols from Turkestan, and so could only commit a small force for the Holy Land, which did little but brandish the threat of an invasion along the Syrian frontier in October 1269. He raided as far as Harim and Afamiyaa in October, but retreated as soon as Baibars' forces advanced.",(1) What are the full names of the people that Abaqa sent envoys to?,(2) What are the full names of the people that taught Keisai Yoshio photography?,(3) What are the first names of the people that Gloria reveals her secret to?,(4) What are the full names of the people Hummel is sent after?,(5) What are the full names of the people that Julia followed?,1,Pope Clement IV. 001_108,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," A mysterious artist - and psychopath - named Ronnie Mason, steals a dead woman's wedding ring and money and leaves a fake suicide note. The woman's husband, Thomas Turner, when questioned by the local police, believes his dead wife might have been seeing Mason behind his back. He also believes his wife was murdered, but in the absence of other evidence, the police list it as a suicide and drop the case. Mason leaves town, changes his name to Marsh and, using a limp he acquired jumping from the dead woman's bedroom window and a veteran's pin he steals from a fellow passenger on the L.A. bus, passes himself off as a wounded soldier and rents a room in the house of public stenographer Hilda Fenchurch and her younger sister Anne. To the consternation of professor Andrew Lang, who secretly loves Hilda, she falls for Marsh. The scheming Marsh learns that Anne might inherit a great deal of money, so he suddenly switches his affections toward her. Hilda is jealous and suspicious. She plots to lure Marsh to a beach house and poison him. She is unable to go through with it, but when Marsh runs off, he is surprised by Thomas Turner and plunges off a steep cliff to his death.",(1) What is Eep's last name?,(2) What is Ronnie's assumed last name?,(3) What is Dev's last name?,(4) What is Cyrus' last name?,(5) What is Charles' last name?,2,Marsh. 001_490,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Before the 1760s, Westgate consisted of only a farm, a coastguard station (built 1791 and still standing in Old Boundary Road) and a few cottages for the crew that surrounded it. These were located beside the coast at St Mildred's Bay, named after Mildrith, Thanet's patron saint and a one-time Abbess of Minster. The town inherited its name from the Westgate Manor, which was located in the area in medieval times. In the early 20th century, the remains of a Roman villa were discovered in what is now Beach Road, where a stream once used to flow. Fresh water can still be seen rising from the sand at low tide. During the late 1860s, businessmen developed the area into a seaside resort for the upper to middle-classes. A stretch of sea wall, with promenade on top, was constructed around the beaches at St Mildred's Bay and West Bay, and the land divided into plots to be sold for what would become an exclusive development by the sea for wealthy metropolitan families within a gated community, rather than for occasional tourists. The opening of a railway station, in 1871, led to the rapid expansion of the population, which reached 2,738 by 1901. The demands of the increasing population led to the building of the parish churches of St. James in 1872 and St. Saviour in 1884. St. Saviour's was designed by the architect C.N. Beazley. In 1884 it was reported that Essex, on the other side of the Thames Estuary, was hit by a tremor so large that it caused the bells of St. James' Church to ring. In 1884, ownership of most of the resort passed to Coutts Bank, after the previous proprietors had gone bankrupt.Around twenty schools were opened during the late 19th century, although many had only a few pupils or closed within a few years. The largest of the schools were Streete Court School, Wellington House Preparatory School and St Michael's School.Wellington House was established in 1886 by two clergymen, the Bull brothers. It closed in 1970 and was demolished in 1972. Notable old boys included Doctor Who actor Jon Pertwee and cabinet minister John Profumo, known for his involvement in the Profumo affair. Streete Court School was opened in 1894 by John Vine Milne, the father of the author A. A. Milne. In the 1890s, the school was attended by St John Philby, the father of the spy Kim Philby.The Coronation Bandstand was built by the cliff edge in 1903, at a cost of £350, to celebrate the coronation of King Edward VII. The following year, a group of French Ursuline nuns, who were banned from teaching in France, fled with some of their pupils to Westgate-on-Sea and established the Ursuline Convent School, which in 1995 was re-established as Ursuline College. In 1910, a Swiss-Gothic styled town hall was built. However, it was soon decided that the building could be put to better use, and in 1912, it was transformed into the Town Hall Cinema. In 1932, it was renamed the Carlton Cinema.",(1) What is the current name of the plant species that was named after Sole?,"(2) What is the name of the current building that was constructed in 1863, although the original purpose is obscure?",(3) What is the first name of the person whose ship was trapped in March of 1912?,(4) What is the current name of the building that was transformed in 1912?,(5) Who was appointed president in 1912?,4,Wellington House Preparatory School. 001_175,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," ""Bix admitted to having used liquor 'in excess' for the past nine years, his daily dose over the last three years amounting to three pints of 'whiskey' and twenty cigarettes.....A Hepatic dullness was obvious, 'knee jerk could not be obtained' – which confirmed the spread of the polyneuritis, and Bix was 'swaying in Romberg position' – standing up with his eyes closed"".While he was away, Whiteman famously kept his chair open in Beiderbecke's honor, in the hope that he would occupy it again. However, when he returned to New York at the end of January 1930, Beiderbecke did not rejoin Whiteman and performed only sparingly. On his last recording session, in New York, on September 15, 1930, Beiderbecke played on the original recording of Hoagy Carmichael's new song, ""Georgia on My Mind"", with Carmichael doing the vocal, Eddie Lang on guitar, Joe Venuti on violin, Jimmy Dorsey on clarinet and alto saxophone, Jack Teagarden on trombone, and Bud Freeman on tenor saxophone. The song would go on to become a jazz and popular music standard. In 2014, the 1930 recording of ""Georgia on My Mind"" was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame.Beiderbecke's playing had an influence on Carmichael as a composer. One of his compositions, ""Stardust"", was inspired by Beiderbecke's improvisations, with a cornet phrase reworked by Carmichael into the song's central theme. Bing Crosby, who sang with Whiteman, also cited Beiderbecke as an important influence. ""Bix and all the rest would play and exchange ideas on the piano"", he said.",(1) What is the full name of the giant of popular music that the Bobcats celebrated?,(2) What is the name of the song that would become a jazz and popular music standard?,(3) When did HTML4 become standard?,(4) What was the name of the song that would go on to become a jazz and popular music standard?,(5) What is the name of the BOM standard?,2,Stardust. 001_311,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," In 2003, The Greencards recorded and self-released Movin' On, their debut album, which sold 10,000 copies at shows and online, and entered the top five on the Americana radio charts. Pat Flynn, one of the band members of the New Grass Revival, guested on the recording of Movin' On as a session guitarist, and would return to do so again on Weather and Water. The album was said to break past traditional rules of bluegrass music by integrating a jam-band mindset while blending classical folk balladry and rock 'n' roll into the sound. Contrasting with that appraisal, the album was also cited as a traditional and successful ""lo-fi"" approach to bluegrass music. Critics noted the virtuoso solos on mandolin, fiddle, and guitar on Movin' On.The Greencards gained more fans and became known by name quickly after the release of Movin' On. The band was credited with performing the most energetic sets during the course of the 2004 Austin City Limits Music Festival, were said to bring a global sound to bluegrass, and—by drawing on influences such as Bob Dylan and The Beatles—were pushing the genre's boundaries. Their live show during this period was ranked by the Houston Chronicle in the top five nights of live music for the year in 2004.Movin' On earned The Greencards the 2004 Austin Music Award for Best New Band. Several months after the awards, the band was signed by Dualtone Records and began work on their next album, Weather and Water. The label re-released Movin' On at the beginning of 2005, generating still more airplay and sales.",(1) When rock and roll hall of fame inducted by rod stewart?,(2) is ccr in the rock and roll hall of fame?,(3) What is the name of the album said to break past traditional rules of bluegrass music by integrating a jam-band mindset while blending classical folk balladry and rock 'n' roll into the sound?,"(4) past or present, name a rock n'roll superstar.",(5) Do you like rock and roll music?,3,The Greencards. 001_338,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Hotel. Running from October 2015 to January 2016, Hotel is the fifth season of the television anthology horror series, American Horror Story, in which Gaga played a hotel owner named Elizabeth. At the 73rd Golden Globe Awards, Gaga received the Best Actress in a Miniseries or Television Film award for her work on the season. She appeared in Nick Knight's 2015 fashion film for Tom Ford's 2016 spring campaign and was guest editor for V fashion magazine's 99th issue in January 2016, which featured 16 different covers. She received Editor of the Year award at the Fashion Los Angeles Awards.",(1) What are the names of the two people who co-wrote the song Til It Happens to You?,"(2) Who wrote the song ""I Honestly Love You"" (1974)?","(3) What is the name of the person who co-wrote the song ""Til It Happens to You"" with Diane Warren?","(4) What are the names of the two people who co-wrote the song ""(She Can) Do That""?","(5) who co-wrote the hit song ""on and on"" in 1984?",3,Gaga. 001_201,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Three years after the events of the previous film, ex-CIA operative Frank Moses tries to lead a normal life with girlfriend Sarah Ross. He dismisses Marvin Boggs' claims that enemies are still after them; Marvin drives off and his car explodes. Although Frank is unconvinced Marvin is dead, Sarah convinces him to attend Marvin's funeral where he delivers a tearful eulogy. Government agents interrogate Frank at an FBI Yankee White facility. Corrupt agent Jack Horton and a team of private military contractors ambush the facility; he threatens to torture Sarah until Frank gives him the information he needs. Frank evades Horton, and with the help of the still living Marvin, goes on the run with Sarah. Marvin explains he and Frank have been targeted as members of Operation Nightshade, a clandestine operation during the Cold War to smuggle a nuclear weapon into Russia. Horton convinces international agencies that Frank and his associates are terrorists on the run. Frank's old ally Victoria notifies him that she has been contracted by MI6 to kill the fugitives. Another top contract killer, Han Cho-Bai, is also hired, seeking revenge against Frank. Frank, Marvin, and Sarah steal Han's plane and fly to Paris to find ""The Frog"", with the Americans and Han in pursuit. They are met by Katja Petrokovich, a Russian secret agent with whom Frank had a relationship, who is also investigating Nightshade. They interrogate the Frog and Sarah, hoping to one-up Katja, seduces him.",(1) What is the full name of the person whose husband is tortured?,(2) What is the full name of the person whose car explodes?,(3) What is the full name of the person whose parents died?,(4) What is the full name of the person whose brother died in a car accident?,(5) What is the full name of the person whose car is crashed in the woods by their sibling?,2,Nightshade. 001_475,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Former model Maria Wyeth, who comes from a Nevada town with a population of 28, is now a successful actress. But she is unhappily married to, and separated from, temperamental producer Carter Lang and also chronically depressed and institutionalized. Reflecting back on what brought her here, Maria recalls driving around Los Angeles in her yellow Chevrolet Corvette and spending time with her closest friend, B.Z. Mendenhall, an unhappy man who is gay. Maria has a brain-damaged daughter, Kate, who is being kept in a sanitarium at the insistence of Carter, who resents Maria visiting the girl so frequently. Maria's secret desire is to live somewhere with Kate and find some kind of joy in life together. Maria has been having an affair with Les Goodwin, a screenwriter. When she tells Carter she is pregnant, he demands she get an abortion. Maria goes to Las Vegas and has a fling with a mob-connected lawyer, Larry Kulik, and later returns to L.A. and has a one-night stand with Johnny Waters, a television star who needs to watch his own show on TV to get in the mood. Bored and depressed, Maria steals Johnny's car and speeds off. When she is stopped by police, drugs are found in the car and she is placed under arrest. Her spirits at an all-time low, Maria returns to Las Vegas and finds that B.Z. is equally unhappy. When he swallows a handful of pills and washes them down with vodka, rather than call for help, Maria cradles him and watches him die. Back at her institution, a psychiatrist asks why she keeps on playing, when knowing what 'nothing' (nihilism) means. Maria replies, ""Why not?"".",(1) What is the full name of the person who was married to Maria?,(2) What is the full name of the person who married Anne Scott-James?,(3) What is the full name of the person who is unhappily married to a temperamental producer?,(4) What is the full name of the person who initially planned to work as a producer?,(5) What is the full name of the person who is married to Joan?,3,Carter. 001_438,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," the eastern half became the Deschutes National Forest, while the western half merged in 1934 to form the Willamette National Forest.",(1) Crabtree Creek is a tributary that begins in the western foothills of a major mountain range whose highest peak is how tall?,"(2) What is the name of the group that arrived in eastern foothills near Whychus Creek by May or June, and then climbed to higher pastures in August and September?","(3) What date were more men killed, 27 August or 8 September?",(4) What is the name of the person that arrived in England in May 1871?,"(5) Aspen Creek Grill formerly Aspen Creek is a restaurant chain previously owned by which American chain restaurant that specializes in steaks and promotes a Western theme, and is headquartered in Louisville, Kentucky?",2,Cascades Forest Reserve. 001_63,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," After busting a human trafficking ring led by Sheriff Wood, Jack Reacher returns to his old military headquarters to meet Major Susan Turner, whom he has been working with during his travels and has become his closest friend – only to learn from Colonel Sam Morgan that Turner has been accused of espionage and detained. Turner's attorney, Colonel Bob Moorcroft, reveals that there is evidence that Turner is involved in the murders of two soldiers in Afghanistan, but Reacher believes she is being framed. Moorcroft also reveals an old acquaintance of Reacher, Candice Dutton, has filed a paternity suit against him, claiming he is the biological father of her 15-year-old daughter, Samantha Dutton. Reacher tries to reach out to Samantha, but she rebuffs him, believing he is after her biological mother due to her past as a prostitute. Moorcroft is later killed by an unknown assassin known as the Hunter. Reacher is framed for Moorcroft's murder and arrested and transported to the prison where Turner is being detained. Two hitmen arrive to kill her, but Reacher neutralizes them, rescues her and they escape to Morgan's house, having deduced he is involved in the conspiracy, to extract information. After they leave, the Hunter, revealed to be working with Morgan, kills Morgan and frames Reacher which he learns about from a friend, Sergeant Leach, when he asks her to investigate a military contractor. Reacher and Turner uncover surveillance pictures of Samantha and surmise she is in danger, arriving at her home to find her foster parents dead and Samantha hiding in the kitchen. Reacher and Turner decide to escort Samantha to Turner's old private school for protection, but discover that she has her mobile phone with her and that the enemy probably knows exactly where they are. They discard the phone and make a quick exit, during which Samantha steals a backpack from one of the students to use the credit cards.",(1) What is the full name of the friend of the person that is accused of murdering two soldiers in Afghanistan?,(2) What is the full name of the person that has a friend that is going to start flying again?,(3) What is the full name of the person who is accused of being a devil?,(4) Who was accused of murdering Polly?,(5) What is the name of the person that kills the attorney of the person accused of espionage?,1,Turner. 001_118,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," One hundred and fifty million years ago, Oregon did not exist. Not until plate tectonics separated North America from Europe and North Africa and pushed it westward did the continent acquire, bit by bit, what became the Pacific Northwest. Over many millions of years, the continent collided with and incorporated islands, reefs, and other exotic terranes. Part of the last major exotic terrane acquired by the North American Plate during the Eocene lies under the Tryon Creek watershed. The terrane consisted of a chain of seamounts that by 34 million years ago was being uplifted to become the Oregon Coast Range and the Tualatin Mountains (West Hills). The easternmost exposure of the basalts of this terrane is in Waverly Heights, near Milwaukie, across the Willamette River from Tryon Creek, and this formation underlies most of Tryon Creek State Park.Between 15 and 16 million years ago, in the Middle Miocene, eruptions of Columbia River basalts from volcanic vents in eastern Oregon and Washington flowed across much of northern Oregon, sometimes reaching the Pacific Ocean. Although these basalts have been mapped in the West Hills under Marquam Hill, Hoyt Arboretum, and the steepest slopes of Forest Park, they flowed around but did not completely cover the Waverly Hills Formation in the Tryon Creek watershed.Starting about 3 million years ago and continuing at least through the late Pleistocene, extensional faulting of the Earth's crust led to eruption of small volcanoes in the Boring volcanic field. This field extended roughly from Portland and Tualatin on the west to Battle Ground, Washington, on the north to Sandy and Boring on the east. Two of these volcanoes, Mount Sylvania and Cook's Butte, are in the Tryon Creek watershed. The Mount Sylvania eruptions included ash plumes and lava flows that covered some of the Waverly Heights Formation and Columbia River basalts.About 15,000 years ago, cataclysmic ice age events known as the Missoula Floods or Bretz Floods originating in the Clark Fork region of northern Idaho inundated the Columbia River basin many times. These floods deposited huge amounts of debris and sediment and created new floodplains in the Willamette Valley. Over long stretches of time between the great floods, dry winds deposited silt. At elevations above 300 feet (90 m) in the Tryon Creek watershed, wind-blown silt covers the lava, while at lower elevations sand and gravel cover the bedrock.",(1) ASCII was incorporated into what other extensions?,"(2) What is the name of the continent that collided with and incorporated islands, reefs and other exotic terrains?",(3) What is the name of the family that houses Miguel and several other players?,(4) Number of branches of jammu and kashmir bank that was incorporated in 1938?,(5) What is the name of the joint group that Estonia shares with Denmark and 7 other countries?,2,North America. 001_124,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," One day, Molly Standing is picking apples in her father's apple orchard in California, with her friend Gertie, when they meet two boys, Tommy Melville and Gus Schultz. Molly falls in love with Tommy while Gertie falls in love with Gus. They plan a double wedding. Gerald Winters and his mother, who are wealthy art patrons, hear Molly singing, and, at Gerald's suggestion, since he is very attracted to her, they sponsor her to study in Italy. Molly is reluctant to go but finally accepts when she discovers her father is in need of money. She leaves on the day that Tommy had hoped would be their wedding day. He says goodbye to her before attending Gertie and Gus's wedding ceremony. Molly becomes a success in Rome. She returns to the United States to sing at the Metropolitan Opera House in New York City, where she is again a great success. After the performance, Tommy attends the party which has been given by Gerald and his mother. Molly asks Tommy to sing, but her society friends do not think much of his singing. Realizing that Molly now lives in a world far apart from his, Tommy breaks off his engagement and returns to the orchards. Molly stays in New York for two years and then moves on to San Francisco for a concert stop. Although she is supposed to marry Gerald soon, she is unhappy. She goes to her father's orchards to visit her old friend Gertie, to see how things are going with her. She happens to run into Tommy, and they rekindle their love and are married. Before they leave on their honeymoon, the doctor informs Molly's manager and Tommy that Schilling has lost her voice and will never sing again, except perhaps, a lullaby.",(1) What is the full name of the person who drugs someone?,(2) What is the first name of the person who is very attracted to someone?,(3) What is the first name of the person who is rescued from humiliation by someone?,(4) What is the full name of the person who mocks someone?,(5) What is the first name of the person who stopped himself from punching someone?,2,Molly Standing. 001_155,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Since King George VI's death, Queen Elizabeth II's custom has been to spend the anniversary of that and of her own accession privately with her family at Sandringham House, and, more recently, to use it as her official base from Christmas until February. In celebrating Christmas at Sandringham, the Queen follows the tradition of her last three predecessors, whereas her great-great-grandmother, Queen Victoria, held her celebrations at Windsor Castle. The taxation arrangements of the monarch meant that no inheritance tax was paid on the Sandringham or Balmoral estates when they passed to the Queen, at a time when it was having a deleterious effect on other country estates. On her accession, the Queen asked her husband, the Duke of Edinburgh, to take on the responsibility for the management of the estate. The Duke has worked to move towards self-sufficiency, generating additional income streams, taking more of the land in hand, and amalgamating many of the smaller tenant farms.In January 1957 the Queen received the resignation of the Prime Minister Anthony Eden at the house. Eden's wife, Clarissa, recorded the event in her diary, ""8 January – Anthony has to go through a Cabinet and listening to Harold prosing for half an hour. Then by train to Sandringham. Many photographers. We arrive into the hall where everyone is looking at the television."" At the end of that year, the Queen made her first televised Christmas broadcast from Sandringham. In the 1960s, plans were initiated to demolish the house and replace it with a modern residence by David Roberts, an architect who worked mainly at the University of Cambridge. The plans were not taken forward, but modernisation of the interior of the house and the removal of a range of ancillary buildings were carried out by Hugh Casson, who also decorated the Royal Yacht, Britannia. In 1977, for her silver jubilee, the Queen opened the house to the public.Sandringham continues to operate as a sporting estate. The pheasants and partridge are no longer reared for this purpose, and Sandringham is now one of the few wild shoots in England. Along with her equestrian interest in the Sandringham Stud, where she has bred several winning horses, the Queen has developed a successful gun dog breeding programme at Sandringham. Following the tradition of a kennels at Sandringham established by her great grandfather, when Queen Alexandra kept over 100 dogs on the estate, the Queen prefers black labrador retrievers, over the yellow type favoured by her father, and the terriers bred by her earlier predecessors. Since his retirement from official duties in August 2017, the Duke of Edinburgh has spent increasing amounts of time at Wood Farm, a cottage on the Sandringham Estate used by the Duke and the Queen when not hosting guests at the main house. Sandringham is one of the two homes owned by the Queen in her private capacity, rather than as head of state, the other being Balmoral Castle.",(1) What is the full name of the person whose friends tell her that she is being foolish?,(2) From what person did the tradition of the Christmas tree originate?,(3) What is the full name of the person who ended the tradition of Sandringham Time begun by his grandfather?,(4) What is the full name of the person whose last three predecessors set the tradition for celebrating Christmas at Sandringham that she follows?,(5) What is the last name of the person who based himself at Sandringham Hall?,4,Queen Elizabeth II. 001_106,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," The film begins with the Descendents' origins in the neighboring communities of Hermosa Beach and Manhattan Beach, California in the late 1970s. Middle school friends Frank Navetta and Dave Nolte start the band in 1977 by writing songs together on guitar. Classmate Bill Stevenson impresses them with his musical talents and becomes their drummer. In 1979 they meet bassist Tony Lombardo in Long Beach and recruit him to the band. Nolte bows out to join his brothers in The Last, and Navetta, Stevenson, and Lombardo record the Descendents' debut single. Stevenson's high school classmate Milo Aukerman joins the band as lead singer, and the new lineup builds a local following through their catchy and melodic songs, energetic live shows, and Aukerman's image as a nerd. They release the Fat EP (1981) and their debut album Milo Goes to College (1982), so named because Aukerman leaves the band to study biology. Stevenson drums in Black Flag for the next few years. In 1985 the Descendents reconvene for a second album, I Don't Want to Grow Up. Navetta has burned all of his equipment and moved to Oregon, and is replaced by Ray Cooper. Stevenson pushes for the band to tour, but Lombardo declines and quits. He is replaced by Doug Carrion, and this lineup records 1986's Enjoy!, after which Cooper and Carrion both leave the band. Stevenson recruits bassist Karl Alvarez from Salt Lake City, who brings in his close friend Stephen Egerton to play guitar. The new lineup releases the 1987 album All, themed around the philosophical concept of ""All"" invented by Stevenson and friend Pat McCuistion. Aukerman leaves the band again to attend graduate school.",(1) What is the first name of the person engaged to the man that Ray falls in love with?,(2) What was the last name of the keyboard player that left the band?,(3) What is the last name of the man that Ray Cooper replaces in the band?,(4) What is the name of Allison's band?,(5) What is the last name of the man that inexperienced scientist replaced?,3,Frank. 001_25,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," At Eynsford, with Moeran as his co-tenant, Heseltine presided over a bohemian household with a flexible population of artists, musicians and friends. Moeran had studied at the Royal College of Music before and after the First World War; he avidly collected folk music and had admired Delius during his youth. Although they had much in common, he and Heseltine rarely worked together, though they did co-write a song, ""Maltworms"". The other permanent Eynsford residents were Barbara Peache, Heseltine's long-term girlfriend whom he had known since the early 1920s, and Hal Collins, a New Zealand Māori who acted as a general factotum. Peache was described by Delius's assistant Eric Fenby as ""a very quiet, attractive girl, quite different from Phil's usual types"". Although not formally trained, Collins was a gifted graphic designer and occasional composer, who sometimes assisted Heseltine. The household was augmented at various times by the composers William Walton and Constant Lambert, the artist Nina Hamnett, and sundry acquaintances of both sexes.The ambience at Eynsford was one of alcohol (the ""Five Bells"" public house was conveniently across the road) and uninhibited sexual activity. These years are the primary basis for the Warlock legends of wild living and debauchery. Visitors to the house left accounts of orgies, all-night drunken parties, and rough horseplay that at least once brought police intervention. However, such activities were mainly confined to weekends; within this unconventional setting Heseltine accomplished much work, including settings from the Jacobean dramatist John Webster and the modern poet Hilaire Belloc, and the Capriol Suite in versions for string and full orchestra. Heseltine continued to transcribe early music, wrote articles and criticism, and finished the book on Gesualdo. He attempted to restore the reputation of a neglected Elizabethan composer, Thomas Whythorne, with a long pamphlet which, years later, brought significant amendments to Whythorne's entry in The History of Music in England. He also wrote a general study of Elizabethan music, The English Ayre.In January 1927, Heseltine's string serenade was recorded for the National Gramophonic Society, by John Barbirolli and an improvised chamber orchestra. A year later, HMV recorded the ballad ""Captain Stratton's Fancy"", sung by Peter Dawson. These two are the only recordings of Heseltine's music released during his lifetime. His association with the poet and journalist Bruce Blunt led to the popular Christmas anthem ""Bethlehem Down"", which the pair wrote in 1927 to raise money for their Christmas drinking. By the summer of 1928 his general lifestyle had created severe financial problems, despite his industry. In October he was forced to give up the cottage at Eynsford, and returned to Cefn Bryntalch.",(1) What was the name of the person who worked under Speer?,(2) What was the last name of the person who worked in a pharmacy?,"(3) What is the last name of the person who worked with Eve on ""Rich Girl?""?","(4) What is the name of the person who rarely worked with Heseltine, although they had much in common?",(5) What is the first name of the person who a plasterer who worked at Belton?,4,Heseltine. 001_204,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," William Etty was born in 1787 in York, the son of a miller and baker. He showed artistic promise from an early age, but his family were financially insecure, and at the age of 12 he left school to become an apprentice printer in Hull. On completing his seven-year indenture he moved to London ""with a few pieces of chalk-crayons in colours"", with the aim of emulating the Old Masters and becoming a history painter. Etty gained acceptance to the Royal Academy Schools in early 1807. After a year spent studying under renowned portrait painter Thomas Lawrence, Etty returned to the Royal Academy, drawing at the life class and copying other paintings. In 1821 the Royal Academy exhibited one of Etty's works, The Arrival of Cleopatra in Cilicia (also known as The Triumph of Cleopatra). The painting was extremely well received, and many of Etty's fellow artists greatly admired him. He was elected a full Royal Academician in 1828, ahead of John Constable. He became well respected for his ability to capture flesh tones accurately in painting and for his fascination with contrasts in skin tones. Following the exhibition of Cleopatra, Etty attempted to reproduce its success, concentrating on painting further history paintings containing nude figures. He exhibited 15 paintings at the Summer Exhibition in the 1820s (including Cleopatra), and all but one contained at least one nude figure. In so doing Etty became the first English artist to treat nude studies as a serious art form in their own right, capable of being aesthetically attractive and of delivering moral messages. Although some nudes by foreign artists were held in private English collections, Britain had no tradition of nude painting, and the display and distribution of nude material to the public had been suppressed since the 1787 Proclamation for the Discouragement of Vice. The supposed prurient reaction of the lower classes to his nude paintings caused concern throughout the 19th century. Many critics condemned his repeated depictions of female nudity as indecent, although his portraits of male nudes were generally well received. (Etty's male nude portraits were primarily of mythological heroes and classical combat, genres in which the depiction of male nudity was considered acceptable in England.) From 1832 onwards, needled by repeated attacks from the press, Etty remained a prominent painter of nudes but made conscious efforts to try to reflect moral lessons in his work.",(1) What is the last name of the person whose family was financially insecure?,(2) What is the full name of the person whose family was killed?,(3) What is the last name of the person whose family is falling apart?,(4) What is the last name of the person whose chancellor was Marigliani?,(5) What is the first name of the person whose family name needed restoring?,1,Etty. 001_373,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," A former police detective and Vietnam veteran in New Orleans and a recovering alcoholic, Dave Robicheaux, is living a quiet life in the swamplands of Louisiana with his wife Annie. The couple's tranquility is shattered one day when a drug smuggler's plane crashes in a lake, right before their eyes. Robicheaux succeeds in rescuing a lone survivor, a Salvadoran girl, whom he and Annie quickly adopt and name Alafair. With the arrival of a DEA officer named Dautrieve and an inherent connection to Bubba Rocque, the leading drug kingpin in the area and Robicheaux's childhood friend from New Iberia, Dave becomes involved in solving the case and consequently finds himself and his family in danger. Robicheaux is assaulted by two thugs as a warning. With help from his former girl-friend Robin, an exotic dancer who still has feelings for him, he continues to investigate. His longtime acquaintance Bubba denies any involvement, but Dave warns him and Bubba's sultry wife Claudette that he is going to find out who is behind all this and do something about it. He tracks down one of the men who attacked him, Eddie Keats, and splits his head open with a pool cue in Keat's own bar. Killers come to the Robicheaux home late one night. Robicheaux is unable to prevent his wife Annie from being killed. He falls off the wagon and neglects the young girl they adopted. Robin comes to stay with them. Clearing his head, Robicheaux seeks vengeance against the three killers. He first goes after a large man called Toot, chasing him onto a streetcar and causing his death. Bubba and Claudette reassure a local mob boss named Giancano that they will not let this vendetta get out of hand, and Bubba gets into a fistfight with Robicheaux, falsely suspecting him of an affair with Claudette. Eddie Keats is found dead before Robicheaux can get to him. Going after the last and most dangerous of the killers, Victor Romero, he knows that someone else must be giving them orders.",(1) What are the full names of the people whose dust was inhaled?,(2) What are the full names of the people whose car was damaged?,(3) What are the full names of the people in the band whose mint-condition records fetch a high price?,(4) What are the full names of the people whose tranquility is shattered when a plane crashes in a lake before their eyes?,(5) What are the full names of the people who are informed about their new assignment through a woman?,4,Dave Robicheaux. 001_447,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," At this stage of its development, Sicilian Baroque still lacked the freedom of style that it was later to acquire. Giovanni Battista Vaccarini was the leading Sicilian architect during this period. He arrived on the island in 1730 bringing with him a fusion of the concepts of Bernini and Borromini, and introduced to the island's architecture a unified movement and a play of curves, which would have been unacceptable in Rome itself. However, his works are considered of lesser quality than that which was to come. Notable works which date from this period are the 18th century wings of the Palazzo Biscari at Catania; and Vaccarini's church of Santa Agata, also in Catania. On this building Vaccarini quite clearly copied the capitals from Guarino Guarini's Architettura Civile. It is this frequent copying of established designs that causes the architecture from this period, while opulent, also to be disciplined and almost reined in. Vaccarini's style was to dominate Catania for the next decades. A second hindrance to Sicilian architects' fully achieving their potential earlier was that frequently they were only rebuilding a damaged structure, and as a consequence having to match their designs to what had been before, or remained. The Cathedral of San Giorgio at Modica (Illustration 10) is an example. It was badly damaged in the earthquake of 1613, rebuilt in 1643 in a Baroque style while keeping the medieval layout, then damaged again in 1693. Rebuilding again began in 1702, by an unknown architect. Finally, Rosario Gagliardi oversaw the façade's completion in 1760, but the compromises he had to make in deference to the existing structure are obvious. While Gagliardi used the same formulae he used so successfully at the church of San Giorgio in Ragusa, here in Modica the building is heavier, and lacks his usual lightness of touch and freedom of design.",(1) ¿Por qué era conocido Giovanni Battista Lusieri?,(2) What was the date of death of Giovanni Battista Stefaneschi?,(3) Quin era el pseudònim de Giovanni Battista Viassolo?,(4) What year did Giovanni Battista Barbirolli make his cell concerto debut?,(5) In what city was Giovanni Battista Vaccarini's style unaccepted?,5,Rome. 001_58,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," a gull kills itself by flying into the front door. At Cathy's birthday party the next day, the guests are attacked by seagulls. The following evening, sparrows invade the Brenner home through the chimney.",(1) who was a good sport about prank?,(2) What is the first name of the person who insults a religion?,(3) What is the last name of the person who plays the piano?,(4) What is the first name of the person who plays a prank?,(5) What is the first name of the person who is a bookkeeper?,4,Mitch. 001_152,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Designed by W. Hogarth, Published according to Act of Parliament. 1 Feb.. 1751 The Act of Parliament referred to is the Engraving Copyright Act 1734. Many of Hogarth's earlier works had been reproduced in great numbers without his authority or any payment of royalties, and he was keen to protect his artistic property, so had encouraged his friends in Parliament to pass a law to protect the rights of engravers. Hogarth had been so instrumental in pushing the Bill through Parliament that on passing it became known as the ""Hogarth Act"".",(1) What is the nickname of the man that has an internet girlfriend?,(2) What is the nickname of the act that the man who introduced Tom Nero helped push through parliament?,(3) What is the last name of the person that the man who introduced Tom Nero in his first print agree with the causes for the rising crime rate?,(4) What is the nickname of the man who shoots at Bugs?,(5) What is the nickname that the visiting man gives to Andrew?,2,Engraving Copyright Act 1734. 001_295,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Rolling Stone named ""Single Ladies"" the best song of 2008, and wrote, ""The beat ... is irresistible and exuberant, the vocal hook is stormy and virtuosic."" ""Single Ladies"" ranked as the second-best song of the 2000s decade in the magazine's 2009 readers' poll, and Rolling Stone critics placed it at number 50 on the list of the 100 Best Songs of the Decade. ""Single Ladies"" was placed at number two on MTV News' list of The Best Songs of 2008; James Montgomery called it ""hyperactive and supercharged in ways I never thought possible. It's epic and sexy and even a bit sad."" ""There is absolutely zero chance Beyoncé ever releases a single like this ever again"", Montgomery concluded. Time magazine's critic Josh Tyrangiel, who called the song ""ludicrously infectious"", ranked it as the seventh-best song of 2008. Douglas Wolf of the same publication placed it at number nine on his list of the All-Time 100 Songs.""Single Ladies"" appeared at number six on the Eye Weekly's critics' list of the Best Singles of 2008, and at number six on About.com's Mark Edward Nero's list of the Best R&B Songs of 2008. On The Village Voice's year-end Pazz & Jop singles list, ""Single Ladies"" was ranked at numbers three and forty one in 2008 and 2009 respectively. Additionally, the Maurice Joshua Club Mix of the song was ranked at number 443 on the 2008 list. ""Single Ladies"" was named the best song of the 2000s decade by Black Entertainment Television (BET). Sarah Rodman, writing for The Boston Globe, named ""Single Ladies"" the fourth most irresistible song of the decade, and stated, ""[Beyoncé] combined leotards with crass engagement-bling baiting into one delicious sexy-yet-antiquated package. The video had the whole world dancing and waving along via YouTube."" VH1 ranked ""Single Ladies"" at number sixteen on its list of The 100 Greatest Songs of the 2000s. In his book Eating the Dinosaur (2009), Chuck Klosterman wrote that ""Single Ladies"" is ""arguably the first song overtly marketed toward urban bachelorette parties"". Jody Rosen of The New Yorker credited the melodies that float and dart over the thump for creating a new sound in music that didn't exist in the world before Beyoncé. He further wrote, ""If they sound 'normal' now, it's because Beyoncé, and her many followers, have retrained our ears."".","(1) What publication listed the ""ludicrously infectious"" single as sixteenth on the 100 Greatest songs of the 2000s?",(2) What publication listed the first single by the band that named themselves after rapid eye movement one of the ten best of the year?,(3) What is the name of the publication who's critic claimed the songs on the album lack lyrical substance?,"(4) What two songs were released as a double A-side single on November 7, 2008?",(5) What publication placed the band that has influenced many newer artists as 94th on their list of The 100 Greatest Artists of All Time?,1,Klosterman. 001_421,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Almost his sole champion in the years after his death was his brother-in-law, Richard Popplewell Pullan. Primarily an illustrator, as well as a scholar and archaeologist, Pullan trained with Alfred Waterhouse in Manchester, before joining Burges's office in the 1850s. In 1859, he married Burges's sister. Following Burges's death in 1881, Pullan lived at The Tower House and published collections of Burges's designs, including Architectural Designs of William Burges (1883) and The House of William Burges (1886). In his preface to Architectural Designs Pullan expressed the hope that illustrated volumes of his brother-in-law's work ""would be warmly welcomed and thoroughly appreciated, not only by his professional brethern, but by all men of educated taste in Europe and America."" This hope was not to be fulfilled for a hundred years but Burges's work did continue to attract followers in Japan. Josiah Conder studied under him, and, through Conder's influence, the notable Japanese architect Tatsuno Kingo was articled to Burges in the year before the latter's death. Burges also received brief, but largely favourable, attention in Muthesius's Das Englische Haus, where Muthesius described him as ""the most talented Gothicist of his day"". From the later twentieth century to the present a renaissance has occurred in the study of Victorian art, architecture and design and Crook contends that Burges's place at the centre of that world, as ""a wide-ranging scholar, an intrepid traveller, a coruscating lecturer, a brilliant decorative designer and an architect of genius,"" is again appreciated. Crook writes further that, in a career of only some twenty years, he became ""the most brilliant architect-designer of his generation,"" and, beyond architecture, his achievements in metalwork, jewellery, furniture and stained glass place him as Pugin's only ""rival [.] as the greatest art-architect of the Gothic Revival."".","(1) What is the full name of the person whose near sole champion in the years after his death was Pullan, his brother-in-law?",(2) What is the full name of the person who dies after his arrest?,(3) What is the full name of the person following whose death the memorial was abandoned half-finished?,(4) What is the full name of the person whose death occurred in 1832?,(5) What is the name of the person after whose death it was revealed that he had left Julian very little in his will?,1,Burges. 001_250,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," At age 15, Lennon formed a skiffle group, the Quarrymen. Named after Quarry Bank High School, the group was established by Lennon in September 1956. By the summer of 1957, the Quarrymen played a ""spirited set of songs"" made up of half skiffle and half rock and roll. Lennon first met Paul McCartney at the Quarrymen's second performance, which was held in Woolton on 6 July at the St Peter's Church garden fête. Lennon then asked McCartney to join the band.McCartney said that Aunt Mimi ""was very aware that John's friends were lower class"", and would often patronise him when he arrived to visit Lennon. According to McCartney's brother Mike, their father similarly disapproved of Lennon, declaring that Lennon would get his son ""into trouble"". McCartney's father nevertheless allowed the fledgling band to rehearse in the family's front room at 20 Forthlin Road. During this time, Lennon wrote his first song, ""Hello Little Girl"", which became a UK top 10 hit for the Fourmost in 1963.McCartney recommended his friend George Harrison to be the lead guitarist. Lennon thought that Harrison, then 14 years old, was too young. McCartney engineered an audition on the upper deck of a Liverpool bus, where Harrison played ""Raunchy"" for Lennon and was asked to join. Stuart Sutcliffe, Lennon's friend from art school, later joined as bassist. Lennon, McCartney, Harrison and Sutcliffe became ""The Beatles"" in early 1960. In August that year, the Beatles were engaged for a 48-night residency in Hamburg, in West Germany, and were desperately in need of a drummer. They asked Pete Best to join them. Lennon's aunt, horrified when he told her about the trip, pleaded with Lennon to continue his art studies instead. After the first Hamburg residency, the band accepted another in April 1961, and a third in April 1962. As with the other band members, Lennon was introduced to Preludin while in Hamburg, and regularly took the drug as a stimulant during their long, overnight performances.","(1) What is the full name of the person who ""was very determined to make this very stark, bare record,"" according to Wood?","(2) What is the full name of the person who ""was acutely aware that ['Hard Rain'] represented the beginning of an artistic revolution""?",(3) What is the last name of the person who said that she was engaged?,"(4) What is the first name of the person who said that Aunt Mimi ""was very aware that John's friends were lower class?""?","(5) What is the first name of the person who stated that the B-side ""was never intended to be on the album?""?",4,Paul. 001_240,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," the first in 1974 at the Seattle Center Coliseum and the second in 1987 at the Kingdome.Seattle also boasts two collegiate sports teams based at the University of Washington and Seattle University, both competing in NCAA Division I for various sports. The University of Washington's athletic program, nicknamed the Huskies, competes in the Pac-12 Conference, and Seattle University's athletic program, nicknamed the Redhawks, mostly competes in the Western Athletic Conference. The Huskies teams use several facilities, including the 70,000-seat Husky Stadium for football and the Hec Edmundson Pavilion for basketball and volleyball. The two schools have basketball and soccer teams that compete against each other in non-conference games and have formed a local rivalry due to their sporting success.The Seattle Thunderbirds hockey team plays in the Canadian major-junior Western Hockey League and are based in the Seattle suburb of Kent. Seattle successfully applied for a new expansion team with the National Hockey League, which will make its first appearance in 2021. Seattle plans to renovate KeyArena to use for the possible NHL team. On March 1, 2018, a ticket drive began to gauge interests in season ticket deposits. Oak View reported that their initial goal of 10,000 deposits was surpassed in 12 minutes, and that they received 25,000 deposits in 75 minutes.",(1) What will be the purpose of the center that will be housed in the law library at the main courthouse in Waukegan?,(2) What else was housed in the city ,(3) What league will be bringing an expansion team in 2021 to the city that once housed the Seattle Supersonics?,(4) What city did the NBA team that was based in Seattle relocate to in 2008?,(5) What were the last two teams to lose to an expansion team on the expansion teams first game?,3,Kingdome. 001_62,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," After busting a human trafficking ring led by Sheriff Wood, Jack Reacher returns to his old military headquarters to meet Major Susan Turner, whom he has been working with during his travels and has become his closest friend – only to learn from Colonel Sam Morgan that Turner has been accused of espionage and detained. Turner's attorney, Colonel Bob Moorcroft, reveals that there is evidence that Turner is involved in the murders of two soldiers in Afghanistan, but Reacher believes she is being framed. Moorcroft also reveals an old acquaintance of Reacher, Candice Dutton, has filed a paternity suit against him, claiming he is the biological father of her 15-year-old daughter, Samantha Dutton. Reacher tries to reach out to Samantha, but she rebuffs him, believing he is after her biological mother due to her past as a prostitute. Moorcroft is later killed by an unknown assassin known as the Hunter. Reacher is framed for Moorcroft's murder and arrested and transported to the prison where Turner is being detained. Two hitmen arrive to kill her, but Reacher neutralizes them, rescues her and they escape to Morgan's house, having deduced he is involved in the conspiracy, to extract information. After they leave, the Hunter, revealed to be working with Morgan, kills Morgan and frames Reacher which he learns about from a friend, Sergeant Leach, when he asks her to investigate a military contractor. Reacher and Turner uncover surveillance pictures of Samantha and surmise she is in danger, arriving at her home to find her foster parents dead and Samantha hiding in the kitchen. Reacher and Turner decide to escort Samantha to Turner's old private school for protection, but discover that she has her mobile phone with her and that the enemy probably knows exactly where they are. They discard the phone and make a quick exit, during which Samantha steals a backpack from one of the students to use the credit cards.",(1) What is the full name of the person that has a friend that is going to start flying again?,(2) What is the full name of the person who is accused of being a devil?,(3) What is the name of the person that kills the attorney of the person accused of espionage?,(4) What is the full name of the friend of the person that is accused of murdering two soldiers in Afghanistan?,(5) Who was accused of murdering Polly?,4,Major Susan Turner. 001_169,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," During the late 12th century, about 100 years after the Norman conquest (1066), the Normans have removed the native ruling class, replacing it with a new monarchy, aristocracy and clerical hierarchy. Thomas Becket is a Saxon protégé and facilitator to the carousing King Henry II, who transforms into a man who continually invokes the ""honour of God"". Henry appoints Becket Lord Chancellor to have a close confidant in this position whom he can completely control. Instead, Becket becomes a major thorn in his side in a jurisdictional dispute. Henry finds his duties as king and his stale arranged marriage to be oppressive, and is described as the ""perennial adolescent"" by the Bishop of London. Henry is more interested in escaping his duties through drunken forays onto the hunting grounds and local brothels. He is increasingly dependent on Becket, a Saxon commoner, who arranges these debaucheries when he is not busy running Henry's court. This foments great resentment on the part of Henry's Norman noblemen, who distrust and envy this Saxon upstart, as well as the queen and Henry's mother, who see Becket as an unnatural and unseemly influence upon the royal personage. Henry finds himself in continuous conflict with the elderly Archbishop of Canterbury, who opposes the taxation of Church property to support Henry's military campaigns in France (""Bishop, I must hire the Swiss Guards to fight for me – and no one has ever paid them off with principles!""). During one of his campaigns in coastal France, he receives word that the old archbishop has ""gone to God's bosom"". In a burst of inspiration, Henry exercises his prerogative to pick the next Archbishop and informs an astonished Becket that he is the royal choice.",(1) What is the first name of the person who composed major works for the organ?,(2) What is the first name of the person who becomes best pals with the crusty rancher's horse?,(3) What is the first name of the person who becomes a primary suspect?,(4) What is the last name of the person who becomes a guest at a luxury chateau?,(5) What is the first name of the person who becomes a major thorn in Henry's side?,5,King Henry II. 001_266,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Etty considered Britomart Redeems Faire Amoret one of his major works. Following its exhibition at the 1833 Summer Exhibition, it was exhibited in August of the same year at the Royal Manchester Institution. It was sold at this second exhibition for £157 (about £15,000 in today's terms) to an anonymous collector listed in Etty's records only as ""Mr. L., Manchester"". It was one of 133 Etty paintings exhibited in a major retrospective exhibition of his work at the Royal Society of Arts in June–August 1849; during this exhibition it was sold on to Lord Charles Townshend for a sum of 520 guineas (about £56,000 in today's terms).Etty died in 1849, having continued working and exhibiting up to his death, and continued to be regarded by many as a pornographer. Charles Robert Leslie observed shortly after Etty's death that ""[Etty] himself, thinking and meaning no evil, was not aware of the manner in which his works were regarded by grosser minds"". Interest in him declined as new movements came to characterise painting in Britain, and by the end of the 19th century the sales prices achieved by his paintings were falling below the original values.",(1) What is the last name of the person who owned the castle before Antonin bought it?,(2) What is the last name of the person who bought Amantha?,(3) What is the last name of the person who was bought a Broadwood piano?,(4) What is the last name of the person who decided to devote themselves to portrait painting in 1856?,(5) What is the last name of the person who Townshend bought the painting from?,5,Etty. 001_132,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," The storyline revolves around Lou Gehrig playing himself, who decides to give up baseball in New York for the life of a western cattle rancher. Once at the ranch, Gehrig encounters a protection racket preying on the ranchers by extortion and violence. He teams up with a crusading local attorney to fight the crooks and ultimately put them in jail. In the opening scene, Lou Gehrig is surrounded by a group of reporters at Grand Central Terminal in New York City, where he is about to take a train to his sister's ranch out west in Rawhide. Proclaiming that he is ""through with baseball"", he tells the sceptical newsmen that he wants the ""peace and quiet"" of the cowboy life.Gehrig plays an easygoing dude rancher, whose self-deprecating humor is displayed the first time he attempts to ride a horse. As he timidly approaches his steed, a ranch hand urges, ""Jus' walk right up to him like ya' wasn't afraid"", to which Gehrig deadpans, ""I couldn't be that deceitful"".An unscrupulous interloper, Ed Saunders, and his henchmen have seized control of the local ""Ranchers Protective Association"" by subterfuge and are using it as a front to extort outrageous ""association fees"" from the local ranchers, resorting to violence and bribery. After Gehrig refuses to pay, one of his ranch hands is shot by one of the crooks. Gehrig storms into the local saloon to confront Saunders and his gang. When a barroom brawl ensues, the attorney (played by co-star Smith Ballew) joins in the fight as Gehrig hurls billiard balls at the criminals. The movie eventually reaches a climax in the obligatory western film chase scene when Gehrig and the other ranchers form a posse to chase the fleeing Saunders gang and put them in jail.",(1) Is Benjamin Franklin Richard Saunders?,(2) How much in legal fees did the The Sun have to pay to the Queen?,(3) What group of people traveled to Europe in 1890?,(4) What group of people has to pay association fees to Ed Saunders?,(5) What happens when Will tries to pay off Ed and his sons?,4,Rawhide. 001_3,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Philip Arnold Heseltine (30 October 1894 – 17 December 1930), known by the pseudonym Peter Warlock, was a British composer and music critic. The Warlock name, which reflects Heseltine's interest in occult practices, was used for all his published musical works. He is best known as a composer of songs and other vocal music; he also achieved notoriety in his lifetime through his unconventional and often scandalous lifestyle. As a schoolboy at Eton College, Heseltine met the British composer Frederick Delius, with whom he formed a close friendship. After a failed student career in Oxford and London, Heseltine turned to musical journalism, while developing interests in folk-song and Elizabethan music. His first serious compositions date from around 1915. Following a period of inactivity, a positive and lasting influence on his work arose from his meeting in 1916 with the Dutch composer Bernard van Dieren; he also gained creative impetus from a year spent in Ireland, studying Celtic culture and language. On his return to England in 1918, Heseltine began composing songs in a distinctive, original style, while building a reputation as a combative and controversial music critic. During 1920–21 he edited the music magazine The Sackbut. His most prolific period as a composer came in the 1920s, when he was based first in Wales and later at Eynsford in Kent. Through his critical writings, published under his own name, Heseltine made a pioneering contribution to the scholarship of early music. In addition, he produced a full-length biography of Frederick Delius and wrote, edited, or otherwise assisted the production of several other books and pamphlets. Towards the end of his life, Heseltine became depressed by a loss of his creative inspiration. He died in his London flat of coal gas poisoning in 1930, probably by his own hand.",(1) What is the last name of the person who took vocal lessons with J.E. Hutchinson?,(2) What is the last name of the person who recorded several albums of original music?,(3) What is the last name of the person who was employed as a court composer at Brunswick in 1694?,(4) What is the last name of the person who is best known for his mid-period allegorical landscapes?,(5) What is the last name of the person who is best known as a composer of songs and other vocal music?,5,Heseltine. 001_261,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Sensitive, club-footed artist Philip Carey is a Briton who has been studying painting in Paris for four years. His art teacher tells him his work lacks talent, so he returns to London to become a medical doctor, but his moodiness and chronic self-doubt make it difficult for him to keep up in his schoolwork. Philip falls passionately in love with vulgar tearoom waitress Mildred Rogers, even though she is disdainful of his club foot and his obvious interest in her. Although he is attracted to the anemic and pale-faced woman, she is manipulative and cruel toward him when he asks her out. Her constant response to his romantic invitations is ""I don't mind,"" an expression so uninterested that it infuriates him – which only causes her to use it all the more. His daydreams about her (her image appears over an illustration in his medical school anatomy textbook, and a skeleton in the classroom is transformed into Mildred) cause him to be distracted from his studies, and he fails his medical examinations. When Philip proposes to her, Mildred declines, telling him she will be marrying a loutish salesman Emil Miller instead. The self-centered Mildred vindictively berates Philip with nasty insults for becoming romantically interested in her. Philip begins to forget Mildred when he falls in love with Norah, an attractive and considerate romance writer working under a male pseudonym. She slowly cures him of his painful addiction to Mildred. But just when it appears that Philip is finding happiness, Mildred returns, pregnant and claiming that Emil has abandoned her. Philip provides a flat for her, arranges to take care of her financially, and breaks off his relationship with Norah. Norah and Philip admit how interpersonal relationships may amount to bondage (Philip was bound to Mildred, as Norah was to Philip, and as Mildred was to Miller).",(1) What is the first name of the person who is married to a cigar salesman?,(2) What is the first name of the person that Artemus tells Bell to kill?,(3) What is the first name of the person that is married to the man that the naive Englishman tells about his marriage plans?,(4) What is the first name of the person that is considering marriage to Lorraine Bennett?,(5) What is the first name of the person that Mildred tells of her imminent marriage to a salesman?,5,Philip. 001_189,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," In support of Nine Inch Nails' third full-length studio album, The Fragile, the live-band reformed for the Fragility tour. The lineup remained largely the same from the Self-Destruct tour, featuring Finck, Clouser, and Lohner. To replace long-time member Vrenna, Reznor held open auditions to find a new drummer, eventually picking then-unknown Jerome Dillon. Dillon would remain a member of the live band until 2005. Nine Inch Nails' record label at the time, Interscope Records, reportedly refused to fund the promotional tour following The Fragile's lukewarm sales. Reznor instead committed himself to fund the entire tour out of his own pocket, concluding that ""The reality is, I’m broke at the end of the tour,"" but also adding ""I will never present a show that isn’t fantastic.""The Fragility tour began in late 1999, running until mid-2000, and was broken into two major legs, Fragility 1.0 and Fragility 2.0 respectively. Destinations included Europe, Japan, New Zealand, Australia, and North America. Before the first Fragility performance date in Spain, Nine Inch Nails opened their final rehearsal in London to 100 fans. Kick-starting the tour was a performance of the title track from The Fragile at the MTV Video Music Awards. Atari Teenage Riot opened for Nine Inch Nails during Fragility 1.0, and A Perfect Circle for Fragility 2.0. At the time, A Perfect Circle featured Josh Freese on drums, who would later replace Dillon and play drums for Nine Inch Nails from 2005 to 2007. The tour featured increasingly large production values, including a triptych video display created by contemporary video artist Bill Viola. Rolling Stone magazine named Fragility the best tour of 2000.In 2002, the tour documentary And All That Could Have Been was released featuring a collection of performances from the Fragility 2.0 tour. While making the DVD, Reznor commented on the tour in retrospect by saying ""I thought the show was really, really good when we were doing it"", but later admitted that he ""can't watch [the DVD] at all. I was sick for most of that tour and I really don't think it was Nine Inch Nails at its best"".",(1) What is the name of the drummer that initially replaced the drummer who suffered a cardiac issue?,(2) What was the name of the band that went on the Self-Destruct tour?,(3) What was the name of Minogue's first tour?,(4) What was the name of the drummer on the Self-Destruct tour?,(5) What was the name of Beyoncé's first international tour?,4,And All That Could Have Been. 001_229,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," a clumsy plagiarism of the Russian School"" and called Ravel a ""mediocrely gifted debutant ... who will perhaps become something if not someone in about ten years, if he works hard."" Another critic, Pierre Lalo, thought that Ravel showed talent, but was too indebted to Debussy and should instead emulate Beethoven. Over the succeeding decades Lalo became Ravel's most implacable critic.From the start of his career, Ravel appeared calmly indifferent to blame or praise. Those who knew him well believed that this was no pose but wholly genuine. The only opinion of his music that he truly valued was his own, perfectionist and severely self-critical. At twenty years of age he was, in the words of the biographer Burnett James, ""self-possessed, a little aloof, intellectually biased, given to mild banter."" He dressed like a dandy and was meticulous about his appearance and demeanour. Orenstein comments that, short in stature, light in frame, and bony in features, Ravel had the ""appearance of a well-dressed jockey"", whose large head seemed suitably matched to his formidable intellect. During the late 1890s and into the early years of the next century, Ravel was bearded in the fashion of the day; from his mid-thirties he was clean-shaven.",(1) What are the names of the two people who played a joke on Nigel?,(2) What are the last names of the two people who Palmer said were obvious influences to Curtis?,(3) What are the first names of the two people who were dismissed as the Beatles' lawyers?,(4) Whose teachers were key influences on their development as a composer?,(5) What are the names of Ravel's two teachers who were key influences on his development as a composer?,5,Ravel. 001_320,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," In ancient times, the Amazons, a proud and fierce race of warrior women, led by their Queen, Hippolyta, battled Ares, the god of war, and his army. During the battle, Hippolyta specifically targeted and beheaded her son Thrax, whom Ares forcibly conceived with her and who is fighting for his father. Hippolyta then defeated Ares, but Zeus stopped her from delivering the death strike. Instead, Hera bound his powers with magic bracers so that he was deprived of his ability to draw power from the psychic aura of violence and death he could instigate, and only another god could release him. In compensation, the Amazons were granted the island of Themyscira, where they would remain eternally youthful and isolated from Man in the course of their duty of holding Ares prisoner for all eternity. Later, Hippolyta was granted a daughter, Princess Diana, whom she shaped from the sand of the Themyscirian seashore and gave life with her own blood. Over a millennium later, an American fighter pilot, USAF Colonel Steve Trevor, is shot down in a dogfight and crash-lands his YF-23 on the island, where he soon runs afoul of the Amazon population, including the combative Artemis. Steve and Diana meet and fight, and Diana defeats him, taking him to the Amazons. After interrogating him with the use of the Amazons' golden lasso, Hippolyta decides he is not an enemy of the Amazons and as such, tradition dictates that an emissary be tasked to ensure his safe return to his own country. Diana volunteers, but is assigned to guard Ares's cell instead since her mother argues that she has not enough experience in dealing with the dangers of the outside world. Diana defies her mother and, her face hidden by a helmet and her guard duty covered by her bookish but kind-hearted Amazon sister Alexa, participates in contests of strength and wins the right to take Trevor back to his home.",(1) What is the name of the person who was blinded for his troubles?,(2) What was the last name of the person who was impressed with Deal's ability to move from bass to guitar?,(3) What is the full name of the person who has the ability to control other people's minds?,(4) What is the name of the person who was deprived of his ability to draw power?,(5) What is the last name of the person who became well respected for his ability to capture flesh tones accurate in painting?,4,Steve. 001_216,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," In Billings, Montana, a police officer arrives and discovers Woody Grant walking on the shoulder of the roadway. Woody is picked up by his son David, who learns that Woody wants to go to Lincoln, Nebraska, to collect a million dollar sweepstakes prize he believes he has won. When David sees the sweepstakes letter, he knows immediately that it is a mail scam designed to get gullible people to purchase magazine subscriptions. David brings his father home, where his mother Kate becomes increasingly annoyed by Woody's insistence on collecting the money. After Woody is picked up again trying to get to Nebraska, David and his brother Ross discuss putting Woody in a retirement home. David pays a visit with his ex-girlfriend, Noel, who returns his belongings and refuses to move back in with him. Their conversation is cut short by a call from Kate reporting that Woody has taken off once again. David retrieves Woody and decides to drive him all the way to Lincoln, much to Kate's dismay. While in Rapid City, South Dakota, Woody goes on a bender and hits his head while stumbling back to their motel room. David takes him to the hospital to get his head stitched up. David learns that they will be passing through Woody's hometown of Hawthorne, Nebraska, and suggests they spend the night with Woody's family. Woody is against the idea, but they end up going anyway. They stay with Woody's brother Ray, his wife, and their two sons, Cole and Bart. Woody and David visit a mechanic shop Woody once co-owned, followed by some beers at a bar. When David brings up Woody's alcoholism and problems within the family—with Woody implying that he did not love Kate nor really want children—they get into an argument. At another bar, they meet Ed Pegram, whom the family blames for stealing Woody's air compressor decades ago. Over David's objections, Woody mentions winning the money and the barflies toast his good fortune. The next day, they learn that the news has spread through the town like wildfire.",(1) In what town does Rudy Sr. live?,(2) In what town is Southampton Airport located?,(3) In what town did Woody Grant run into Ed Pegram?,"(4) Question: In what year did Ed Wood struggle to join the film industry?, Answer: In 1952",(5) In what town did Bill Aiken grow up?,3,Ray. 001_105,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," ""George is not disowning the Beatles ... but it was a long time ago and actually a short part of his life.""Harrison had an interest in sports cars and motor racing; he was one of the 100 people who purchased the McLaren F1 road car. He had collected photos of racing drivers and their cars since he was young; at 12 he had attended his first race, the 1955 British Grand Prix at Aintree. He wrote ""Faster"" as a tribute to the Formula One racing drivers Jackie Stewart and Ronnie Peterson. Proceeds from its release went to the Gunnar Nilsson cancer charity, set up after the Swedish driver's death from the disease in 1978. Harrison's first extravagant car, a 1964 Aston Martin DB5, was sold at auction on 7 December 2011 in London. An anonymous Beatles collector paid £350,000 for the vehicle that Harrison had bought new in January 1965.",(1) What were the last names of the two people who collapsed after being shot?,(2) What were the last names of the two people who were photographers for the album along with M.I.A.?,(3) What were the last names of the two people who went to Los Angeles?,(4) What were the last names of the two people who were married and McCartney was the best man?,(5) What were the last names of the two people who were contemporaries at the Royal Academy?,4,Dhani. 001_300,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.,.,(1) What took 182 days?,(2) What did Kendig decide was the only way to leave the agency?,(3) What does Lang succeed at doing after his college football days?,(4) What may after to them after they leave ?,(5) What location did Starr leave after only ten days?,5,Starr. 001_82,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.,.,(1) What is the last name of the person who was said to smell like teen spirit by Kathleen?,"(2) What publication wrote that the man who rose to national attention in 1956 was ""a genuine cultural force""?","(3) What is the last name of the person who said listening to music by the man who rose to national attention in 1956 was ""like busting out of jail""?",(4) What is the last name of the person who was said to know best he music that rendered boredom impossible?,"(5) What is the last name of the person that said music by the man who had an immense following felt ""like busting out of jail""?",3,Dylan. 001_164,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Gloria Wandrous wakes up in the apartment of wealthy executive Weston Liggett and finds that he has left her $250. An insulted Gloria, whose dress is torn, takes Liggett's wife Emily's (Dina Merrill) mink coat to cover herself and scrawls ""No Sale"" in lipstick on the mirror, but she orders her telephone answering service, BUtterfield 8, to put Liggett through if he calls. Gloria visits a childhood friend, pianist Steve Carpenter, who chastises her for wasting her life on one-night stands but agrees to ask his girlfriend Norma to lend her a dress. Gloria leaves, and Norma tells Steve to choose between her and Gloria. Liggett takes a train to the countryside where his wife Emily is caring for her mother. A friend, Bingham Smith, advises him to end his adulterous relationships and return to Bing's law firm instead of working for the chemical business of Emily's father. Meanwhile, Gloria lies to her mother Annie, claiming to have spent the night at Norma's. Liggett returns home. Finding the lipstick and money, he phones Gloria to explain the money was meant for her to buy a new dress, to replace the one that he had torn. While drinking later that night, Liggett advises her to ask a high price for her lovemaking talents. She insists she does not take payment from her dates and claims she has been hired as a model to advertise the dress she is wearing at three bistros that night. Liggett follows Gloria, watching her flirt with dozens of men at several clubs. He then drives her to a run-down motel. After sleeping together, Liggett and Gloria decide to explore their relationship further. Together for five days, they grow closer, falling genuinely in love with one another and parting only upon the return of Liggett's wife.",(1) What is the full name of the person who has a friend named Rachel?,(2) What is the full name of the man who has a friend named Bingham Smith?,(3) What is the full name of the person who has a girlfriend named Nedra?,(4) What is the full name of the person who has a friend named Susan?,(5) What is the full name of the person who has a wife named Lisa?,2,Carpenter. 001_350,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Following the Seven Years' War (1756–63) and the forced migration of Native American tribes westward, German, Scots-Irish, and other European immigrants settled in the central Susquehanna Valley, including in the area that would become Northumberland, Pennsylvania. Northumberland was laid out around a central village green in 1772, on land originally purchased from the Iroquois by the Province of Pennsylvania in 1768, as part of the first Treaty of Fort Stanwix. During the American Revolution, the village was evacuated as part of the Big Runaway in 1778, and only finally resettled in 1784. In 1794, when the Priestleys moved there, it included Quaker and Wesleyan meeting houses, a brewery, two potteries, a potash manufacturer, a clock maker, a printer (who issued a weekly newspaper), several stores, and approximately one hundred houses. The Priestley property, purchased in 1794 at a total cost of £500 (£ 56,400 in 2019) from Reuben Haines, who had secured the patent to the land for Northumberland, comprised four lots of the original village plan (numbers 29–32). Currently, the house and grounds occupy 1 acre (4,000 m²) at 472 Priestley Avenue. (The address of the house was originally ""North Way"", but the street was later renamed in honor of Joseph Priestley.) This street forms the northwest boundary of the property; the other boundaries are Hanover Avenue to the northeast, Wallis Street to the southwest, and the North Shore Railroad to the southeast. Beyond the railroad line is a baseball field, and beyond that lies the Susquehanna River, which was the original southeastern boundary of the property. The confluence of the West Branch Susquehanna River with the main (or North) branch of the Susquehanna is a short distance southwest of the property, which is at an elevation of 456 feet (139 m).The property's original area was 2 acres (8,000 m²), but this was reduced by about half around 1830 when the Pennsylvania Canal (North Branch Division) was dug through the house's front yard, between the house and river. On May 31, 1860, the Lackawanna and Bloomsburg Railroad opened with a train from Danville. This was the second railroad track in Northumberland, and ran behind the house. The canal closed in 1902 and was later filled in. The modern railroad line approximates the canal's course through the front yard; the track behind the house no longer exists.",(1) Where did Alice and Virginia Madden move to?,(2) What town does Elinor move to?,(3) What village did the Priestleys move to?,(4) Where does Chris move to?,(5) What state did Benjamin move to?,3,The Priestley property. 001_184,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Forty-eight Non-Indian people visited Yosemite Valley in 1855, including San Francisco writer James Mason Hutchings and artist Thomas Ayres. Hutchings wrote an article about his experience that was published in the July 12, 1855, issue of the Mariposa Gazette and Ayres' sketch of Yosemite Falls was published in late 1855; four of his drawings were presented in the lead article of the July 1856 and initial issue of Hutchings' Illustrated California Magazine. The article and illustrations created tourist interest in Yosemite and eventually led to its protection.Ayres returned in 1856 and visited Tuolumne Meadows in the area's high country. His highly detailed angularly exaggerated artwork and his written accounts were distributed nationally and an art exhibition of his drawings was held in New York City. Hutchings took photographer Charles Leander Weed to Yosemite Valley in 1859; Weed took the first photographs of the valley's features, which were presented to the public in a September exhibition held in San Francisco. Hutchings published four installments of ""The Great Yo-semite Valley"" from October 1859 to March 1860 in his magazine and re-published a collection of these articles in his Scenes of Wonder and Curiosity in California, which remained in print into the 1870s. Carleton Watkins exhibited his 17 by 22 in (43 by 56 cm) Yosemite views at the 1867 Paris International Exposition.Photographer Ansel Adams made his first trip to Yosemite in 1916; his photographs of the valley made him famous in the 1920s and 1930s. Adams willed the originals of his Yosemite photos to the Yosemite Park Association, and visitors can still buy direct prints from his original negatives. The studio in which the prints are sold was established in 1902 by artist Harry Cassie Best.Milton and Houston Mann opened a toll road to Yosemite Valley in 1856, up the South Fork of the Merced River. They charged the then considerable sum of two dollars per person until the road was bought by Mariposa County, after which it became free. In 1856, settler Galen Clark discovered the Mariposa Grove of giant sequoia at Wawona, an indigenous encampment in what is now the southwestern part of the park. Clark completed a bridge over the South Fork of the Merced River in 1857 at Wawona for traffic headed toward Yosemite Valley and provided a way station for travelers on the road the Mann brothers built to the valley.Simple lodgings, later called the Lower Hotel, were completed soon afterward; the Upper Hotel, later renamed Hutchings House and eventually known as Cedar Cottage, was opened in 1859. In 1876, the more substantial Wawona Hotel was built to serve tourists visiting the nearby grove of big trees and those on their way to Yosemite Valley. Aaron Harris opened the first campground business in Yosemite in 1876.",(1) What is another name for the Yosemite Freeway?,(2) What is the last name of the person whose original Yosemite photos were willed to the Yosemite Park Association?,"(3) Question: What is the name of the prison?, Answer: Yosemite Sam",(4) What is the last name of the person from whose original negatives visitors to Yosemite can still buy prints?,(5) Who was traveling to Yosemite Valley?,2,Hutchings. 001_126,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," A number of factors led to the popularity of Netherlandish illuminators. Primary was the tradition and expertise that developed in the region in the centuries following the monastic reform of the 14th century, building on the growth in number and prominence of monasteries, abbeys and churches from the 12th century that had already produced significant numbers of liturgical texts. There was a strong political aspect; the form had many influential patrons such as Jean, Duke of Berry and Philip the Good, the latter of whom collected more than a thousand illuminated books before his death. According to Thomas Kren, Philip's ""library was an expression of the man as a Christian prince, and an embodiment of the state – his politics and authority, his learning and piety"". Because of his patronage the manuscript industry in the Lowlands grew so that it dominated Europe for several generations. The Burgundian book-collecting tradition passed to Philip's son and his wife, Charles the Bold and Margaret of York; his granddaughter Mary of Burgundy and her husband Maximilian I; and to his son-in-law, Edward IV, who was an avid collector of Flemish manuscripts. The libraries left by Philip and Edward IV formed the nucleus from which sprang the Royal Library of Belgium and the English Royal Library.Netherlandish illuminators had an important export market, designing many works specifically for the English market. Following a decline in domestic patronage after Charles the Bold died in 1477, the export market became more important. Illuminators responded to differences in taste by producing more lavish and extravagantly decorated works tailored for foreign elites, including Edward IV of England, James IV of Scotland and Eleanor of Viseu.",(1) What is the full name of the person whose husband worked as a novelist?,(2) What is the full name of the person whose library was an expression of the man as a Christian prince?,(3) What is the full name of the person whose father was arrested?,(4) What is the full name of the person whose father was murdered?,(5) What is the full name of the person whose family was killed?,2,Philip the Good. 001_443,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Terry asks his boss's wife Sylvia to his apartment after an office party and the two go to bed. Later, while he is in the bathroom, she hears screams outside and goes naked to the window. Seeing a man attacking a young woman, she opens the window and the assailant runs away. When the media report the murder of a young woman near Terry's flat that night, he thinks the police should know what Sylvia saw but, to protect her, claims he was at the bedroom window. At a police lineup, neither he nor the victim Denise is able to pick out the attacker Carl. Despite the feeble evidence against him, Carl is put on trial for the assault and during the proceedings his lawyer proves that since Terry is short-sighted he could not have witnessed the incident. Carl goes free, leaving not only the police and the prosecution but also Denise and Sylvia aghast at Terry's ineptness. In the courtroom, Carl recognised Sylvia as the woman at the window. Desperate to warn her, Terry finds her at a ballet performance and tells her she must go to the police, but she refuses all further involvement. As he leaves, he sees Carl's distinctive truck parked outside and rushes in again. He is too late, however, for in the dark she has been stabbed fatally and dies in Terry's arms. He takes refuge with Denise, who first seduces him and then offers him a chance to redeem himself. She wants revenge, and with him devises a plot to provoke Carl into another attack. Disguising herself, she goes to a bar where Carl is drinking and signals her availability. Terry follows her as she leaves to go home and, when Carl attacks, the two are able to repel him. He escapes, only to be caught by the police who Terry forewarned.",(1) What is the full name of the person who goes to bring Andy home?,(2) What's the name of the person who goes to a priest who knew her lover?,(3) What is the first name of the person who goes naked to a window?,(4) What is the name of the person who goes on a quest to Canada?,(5) What is the first name of the person who goes to San Francisco?,3,Terry. 001_428,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," On October 1, 2007, Columbia Records released the triple CD retrospective album Dylan, anthologising his entire career under the Dylan 07 logo. As part of this campaign, Mark Ronson produced a re-mix of Dylan's 1966 tune ""Most Likely You Go Your Way and I'll Go Mine"", which was released as a maxi-single. This was the first time Dylan had sanctioned a re-mix of one of his classic recordings.The sophistication of the Dylan 07 marketing campaign was a reminder that Dylan's commercial profile had risen considerably since the 1990s. This first became evident in 2004, when Dylan appeared in a TV advertisement for Victoria's Secret lingerie. Three years later, in October 2007, he participated in a multi-media campaign for the 2008 Cadillac Escalade. Then, in 2009, he gave the highest profile endorsement of his career, appearing with rapper will.i.am in a Pepsi ad that debuted during the telecast of Super Bowl XLIII. The ad, broadcast to a record audience of 98 million viewers, opened with Dylan singing the first verse of ""Forever Young"" followed by will.i.am doing a hip hop version of the song's third and final verse.In October 2008, Columbia released The Bootleg Series Vol. 8 – Tell Tale Signs as both a two-CD set and a three-CD version with a 150-page hardcover book. The set contains live performances and outtakes from selected studio albums from Oh Mercy to Modern Times, as well as soundtrack contributions and collaborations with David Bromberg and Ralph Stanley. The pricing of the album—the two-CD set went on sale for $18.99 and the three-CD version for $129.99—led to complaints about ""rip-off packaging"" from some fans and commentators. The release was widely acclaimed by critics. The abundance of alternative takes and unreleased material suggested to one reviewer that this volume of old outtakes ""feels like a new Bob Dylan record, not only for the astonishing freshness of the material, but also for the incredible sound quality and organic feeling of everything here."".",(1) What is the name of the album that has since received retrospective acclaim from critics?,(2) What was the name of the album that was called the largest album release of all time by Tim Cook?,(3) What is the name of the release that was widely acclaimed by critics?,(4) What is the last name of the person whose seriousness was doubted by some critics?,(5) What is the last name of the person whose release was opposed by Trevor Lock?,3,The Bootleg Series Vol. 8 – Tell Tale Signs. 001_234,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," ""There is no doubt in my mind that his rights end at the base he asked for [...] I consider I have reached my limit and I go no further"".The matter was unresolved when Scott returned from sea duty in May 1907. Scott pressed for a line of demarcation at 170° W—everything to the west of that line, including Ross Island, McMurdo Sound, and Victoria Land, would be Scott's preserve. Shackleton, with other concerns pressing on him, felt obliged to concede. On 17 May he signed a declaration stating that ""I am leaving the McMurdo base to you"", and that he would seek to land further east, either at the Barrier Inlet visited briefly during the Discovery Expedition, or at King Edward VII Land. He would not touch the coast of Victoria Land at all. It was a capitulation to Scott and Wilson, and meant forfeiting the expedition's aim of reaching the South Magnetic Pole which was located within Victoria Land. Polar historian Beau Riffenburgh believes this was ""a promise that should never ethically have been demanded and one that should never have been given, impacting as it might on the entire safety of Shackleton's expedition"". The dispute soured relations between the two men (who nevertheless maintained public civilities), and would eventually lead to the complete rupture of Shackleton's formerly close friendship with Wilson.In his own account of the expedition Shackleton makes no reference to the wrangle with Scott. He merely states that ""before we finally left England I had decided that if possible I would establish my base in King Edward VII Land instead of [...] McMurdo Sound"".","(1) What was the name of the person who wrote, ""we must wait""?",(2) What is the name of the record that reportedly sort of took its own direction?,"(3) What is the name of the person who waited outside the studio while they wrote, ""I Should Be So Lucky""?","(4) What is the name of the person who wrote, ""I feel I have a sort of right to my own field of work""?",(5) What is the first name of the person who is catering her own wedding?,4,Scott. 001_366,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Marcus Templeton is a thirty-year-old, unmarried security guard who describes himself as ""a lonely, desperate man."" He works at night and spends his days looking at pornography and takes to peeping into windows in the hopes of seeing naked women. Marcus is slightly overweight and spends a fair amount of screen time obsessing about his physical health, finally resorting to wearing a corset and using questionable weight-loss products such as Reduce-O-Creme, which promises to ""melt, melt, melt your fat away"" upon application. After several disastrous attempts at dating women, Marcus resorts to seeing prostitutes. He begins to secretly record his encounters with the call girls, first with a small tape recorder and then with a hidden video camera. He quickly spends his entire life savings and contracts sexually transmitted diseases, all the while losing his grip on reality (his father ""appears"" on the television screen and berates Marcus). When a disagreeable prostitute discovers she is being surreptitiously videotaped, she pulls a handgun out of her purse, shoots Marcus and steals his video equipment. As Marcus lies bleeding to death he grabs the nearby bottle of Reduce-O-Creme and applies it to his belly in a final, futile gesture.",(1) What is the first name of the person who composed major works for the organ?,(2) What is the first name of the person who works as a chauffeur?,(3) What is the first name of the person who works at night?,(4) What is the full name of the person who works for the young doctor at Bidnold?,(5) What is the first name of the person whose mother works at the chicken shack?,3,Marcus. 001_299,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.,.,(1) What location did Starr leave after only ten days?,(2) What did Kendig decide was the only way to leave the agency?,(3) What took 182 days?,(4) What may after to them after they leave ?,(5) What does Lang succeed at doing after his college football days?,1,"Rishikesh, India." 001_321,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Tiruchirappalli is situated in central south-eastern India, almost at the geographic centre of the state of Tamil Nadu. The Cauvery Delta begins to form 16 kilometres (9.9 mi) west of the city where the river divides into two streams—the Kaveri and the Kollidam—to form the island of Srirangam. By road it is 912 kilometres (567 mi) south of Hyderabad, 322 kilometres (200 mi) south-west of Chennai and 331 kilometres (206 mi) south-east of Bangalore. The topology of Tiruchirappalli is almost flat, with an average elevation of 88 metres (289 ft). A few isolated hillocks rise above the surface, the highest of which is the Rockfort; its estimated age of 3,800 million years makes it one of the oldest rocks in the world. Other prominent hillocks include the Golden Rock, Khajamalai, and one each at Uyyakondan Thirumalai and Thiruverumbur.The two major rivers draining Tiruchirappalli are the Kaveri and its tributary the Kollidam, but the city is also drained by the Uyyakondan Channel, Koraiyar and Kudamuritti river channels. The land immediately surrounding the Kaveri River—which crosses Tiruchirappalli from west to east—consists of deposits of fertile alluvial soil on which crops such as finger millet and maize are cultivated. Further south, the surface is covered by poor-quality black soil. A belt of Cretaceous rock known as the Trichinopoly Group runs to the north-east of the city, and to the south-east there are layers of archaean rocks, granite and gneiss covered by a thin bed of conglomeratic laterite. The region falls under Seismic Zone III, which is moderately vulnerable to earthquakes.",(1) What are the names of Ray's sons?,(2) What are the names of Tom's sisters?,(3) What are the names of the Stooges?,(4) What are the names of the 5 hillocks?,(5) What are the names of Whitney's parents?,4,Seismic Zone III. 001_478,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," In the fictional town of It Had To Be, Indiana, fullback Blue Grange scores the winning touchdown for It Had To Be University in the 1963 National Championship game. Afterwards, a shunned cheerleader named Bambi is seen fawning over Grange's locker before the on-field celebration pours into the locker room. As a group of cheerleaders are cleaning up the field after the game, all five are skewered with a javelin thrown by an unknown assailant. The bizarre murder makes headlines, as does a subsequent murder involving exploding pompons. As a result, the college's summer cheerleading camp is closed down. In 1982, the camp reopens with Bambi as the instructor. After arriving on campus, she meets Pepe the maintenance man and his mother Salt, both of whom warn her against reopening the camp as they believe it to be cursed with death, but Bambi is undeterred. At a bus station, a young woman named Candy (labeled Victim #1) prepares to board a bus to the cheerleading camp but her religious fanatic mother tries to dissuade her. As they quarrel, red beams of light suddenly streak from Candy's eyes and levitate her mother into the air. As she hangs suspended, Candy tells her that she just wants to be normal and marches away to catch the bus. In another part of town, a male cheerleader named Glenn Dandy (Victim #2) says goodbye to his unconventional family before leaving for camp. Next, Mandy (Victim #3) is introduced by her father in a beauty pageant-style interview, revealing her obsession with dental hygiene. Sandy (Victim #4) asks for directions to the camp at a food truck and decides to hitchhike, but insists on getting references from every driver she passes (eventually accepting a ride with then-U.S. President Ronald Reagan). Andy and Randy (Victims #5 and #6 respectively), two lecherous cheerleaders, are shown smoking marijuana while driving to the camp. The cheerleaders assemble at the camp and are greeted by Bambi.",(1) What is the first name of the person whose mother tries to discourage her?,(2) What is the first name of the person whose mother played clarinet and piano?,(3) What is the first name of the person whose mother was diagnosed with hepatitis?,(4) What is the first name of the person whose mother was born in Antananarivo?,(5) What is the first name of the person whose mother was a Jehovah's Witness?,1,Candy. 001_385,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," As Cole shops, an armed robber demands that the cashier, Michael, hand over all the money in the safe. Michael empties the cash register and says that there is no safe in the shop. As the robber becomes increasingly agitated, Cole approaches him, calls him a coward, and dares the robber to shoot him. Michael intercedes and attempts to wrestle the gun away from the robber, only to be shot in the gut. After Cole calls an ambulance, he receives a phone call from a friend who invites him out to drinks. Cole accepts on the condition that it is not a house party. Cole is frustrated to learn that it is a house party, and he goes downstairs to drink alone, where he meets Maya, the host. The two discuss an approaching asteroid. Maya says that modern stress would evaporate in the face of the meaninglessness of certain doom, and Cole says that everything would matter in that circumstance. The two dance to Maya's favorite song and soon begin dating. A series of flashforwards depict life in post-apocalyptic Scotland after the asteroid has arrived as Cole and Maya hide from alien spaceships, mixed with scenes in the present of their relationship leading up to those events. When they discuss children, Cole says he does not want any, and Maya reveals she is incapable. As the asteroid grows closer, Cole asks Maya to marry him. Maya jokingly accepts, and Cole insists that he is serious; now serious, Maya again agrees. Although initially dismissive of the danger, scientists become increasingly worried about a collision. Various missions to divert the asteroid end in failure, putting the world on edge. In the flashforwards, Cole and Maya's relationship deteriorates in the face of their hardship in finding food and shelter.",(1) Which religion does Armida eventually convert to?,(2) Who does Peter eventually become engaged to?,(3) Where do Alessandro and Ramona eventually move to?,(4) Where does Cole meet the woman he eventually proposes to?,(5) Where did Picasso meet the woman he sedated?,4,cashier. 001_293,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Venezuela, Brazil, Bolivia, Paraguay, Uruguay, and Argentina. Living in open woodland and other open forest habitats, it is mostly sedentary, though some populations may be migratory. The species, which is closely related to becards and tityras, was thought to be either a tyrant-flycatcher or cotinga, before it was placed in Tityridae. The bird is 12.5 to 13 cm (4.9–5.1 in) in length, with whitish undersides, a black crown, and grey-brown upperparts. The sexes are similar in appearance, though the females have duller upperparts. It feeds on insects in the foliage of trees and bushes, and sometimes on the ground. Nesting occurs in a simple cup nest placed in the fork of a tree. Both parents incubate the eggs and help feed the chicks. When the chicks fledge, the parents may divide up the brood to continue helping. The species is not common and little is known about it, but it is not considered in danger of extinction, and has been classified as of least concern by the International Union for Conservation of Nature.",(1) What are alloys that are mostly composed of mercury known as?,(2) What are the common names of the animal that is mostly sedentary?,(3) which common object is made mostly or entirely from renewable resources?,(4) What are the first names of the two that are reconciled?,(5) What is the common English name of the animal that has eight subspecies?,2,Xenopsaris albinucha. 001_24,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," At Eynsford, with Moeran as his co-tenant, Heseltine presided over a bohemian household with a flexible population of artists, musicians and friends. Moeran had studied at the Royal College of Music before and after the First World War; he avidly collected folk music and had admired Delius during his youth. Although they had much in common, he and Heseltine rarely worked together, though they did co-write a song, ""Maltworms"". The other permanent Eynsford residents were Barbara Peache, Heseltine's long-term girlfriend whom he had known since the early 1920s, and Hal Collins, a New Zealand Māori who acted as a general factotum. Peache was described by Delius's assistant Eric Fenby as ""a very quiet, attractive girl, quite different from Phil's usual types"". Although not formally trained, Collins was a gifted graphic designer and occasional composer, who sometimes assisted Heseltine. The household was augmented at various times by the composers William Walton and Constant Lambert, the artist Nina Hamnett, and sundry acquaintances of both sexes.The ambience at Eynsford was one of alcohol (the ""Five Bells"" public house was conveniently across the road) and uninhibited sexual activity. These years are the primary basis for the Warlock legends of wild living and debauchery. Visitors to the house left accounts of orgies, all-night drunken parties, and rough horseplay that at least once brought police intervention. However, such activities were mainly confined to weekends; within this unconventional setting Heseltine accomplished much work, including settings from the Jacobean dramatist John Webster and the modern poet Hilaire Belloc, and the Capriol Suite in versions for string and full orchestra. Heseltine continued to transcribe early music, wrote articles and criticism, and finished the book on Gesualdo. He attempted to restore the reputation of a neglected Elizabethan composer, Thomas Whythorne, with a long pamphlet which, years later, brought significant amendments to Whythorne's entry in The History of Music in England. He also wrote a general study of Elizabethan music, The English Ayre.In January 1927, Heseltine's string serenade was recorded for the National Gramophonic Society, by John Barbirolli and an improvised chamber orchestra. A year later, HMV recorded the ballad ""Captain Stratton's Fancy"", sung by Peter Dawson. These two are the only recordings of Heseltine's music released during his lifetime. His association with the poet and journalist Bruce Blunt led to the popular Christmas anthem ""Bethlehem Down"", which the pair wrote in 1927 to raise money for their Christmas drinking. By the summer of 1928 his general lifestyle had created severe financial problems, despite his industry. In October he was forced to give up the cottage at Eynsford, and returned to Cefn Bryntalch.",(1) What was the name of the person who worked under Speer?,"(2) What is the last name of the person who worked with Eve on ""Rich Girl?""?","(3) What is the name of the person who rarely worked with Heseltine, although they had much in common?",(4) What was the last name of the person who worked in a pharmacy?,(5) What is the first name of the person who a plasterer who worked at Belton?,3,Moeran. 001_431,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," A young idealistic schoolteacher named Ruth Kirke is transporting a group of war orphans from South China to Calcutta when their steamship Tollare is torpedoed and sunk in the Pacific. Along with sailor Timothy Blake, they are the only passengers to survive the enemy attack. They are picked up by the steamship Westonia and taken to San Francisco, where immigration officials inform Ruth that the orphans will be held until a $500 bond is posted for each child. With no money of their own, Ruth and Timothy go to the home of Commodore Thomas Spencer Holliday, the wealthy owner of their sunken cargo ship, who perished during the torpedo attack. When they appeal for financial assistance for the orphans, the commodore's family refuses. Desperate to help the children, Timothy tells the commodore's family that Ruth and the commodore were married aboard the Tollare before it was attacked. With the children's future at stake, Ruth reluctantly goes along with the deception. Ruth, Timothy, and the eight orphans move into the Holliday mansion, where they soon meet the commodore's grandson, Thomas Spencer Holliday III. When a sceptical Tom questions Ruth about how she became his grandmother, Ruth explains that her Christian mission was destroyed in a Japanese bombing raid, and that she was sent south with eight European children, entrusted with their safety. Along the way, they encountered a dying Chinese woman, and Ruth agreed to care for her child as well. Moved by her personal story and her beautiful singing voice, Tom is soon smitten with the young woman.",(1) Who is told that Ruth is married to the commodore?,"(2) Who is married to the person that is ""born from death""?",(3) Who is told that there was an accident?,(4) Who is married to Scott?,(5) Who told Macreedy that Komoko is dead?,1,the commodore's family. 001_214,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," In Billings, Montana, a police officer arrives and discovers Woody Grant walking on the shoulder of the roadway. Woody is picked up by his son David, who learns that Woody wants to go to Lincoln, Nebraska, to collect a million dollar sweepstakes prize he believes he has won. When David sees the sweepstakes letter, he knows immediately that it is a mail scam designed to get gullible people to purchase magazine subscriptions. David brings his father home, where his mother Kate becomes increasingly annoyed by Woody's insistence on collecting the money. After Woody is picked up again trying to get to Nebraska, David and his brother Ross discuss putting Woody in a retirement home. David pays a visit with his ex-girlfriend, Noel, who returns his belongings and refuses to move back in with him. Their conversation is cut short by a call from Kate reporting that Woody has taken off once again. David retrieves Woody and decides to drive him all the way to Lincoln, much to Kate's dismay. While in Rapid City, South Dakota, Woody goes on a bender and hits his head while stumbling back to their motel room. David takes him to the hospital to get his head stitched up. David learns that they will be passing through Woody's hometown of Hawthorne, Nebraska, and suggests they spend the night with Woody's family. Woody is against the idea, but they end up going anyway. They stay with Woody's brother Ray, his wife, and their two sons, Cole and Bart. Woody and David visit a mechanic shop Woody once co-owned, followed by some beers at a bar. When David brings up Woody's alcoholism and problems within the family—with Woody implying that he did not love Kate nor really want children—they get into an argument. At another bar, they meet Ed Pegram, whom the family blames for stealing Woody's air compressor decades ago. Over David's objections, Woody mentions winning the money and the barflies toast his good fortune. The next day, they learn that the news has spread through the town like wildfire.",(1) In what town did Bill Aiken grow up?,(2) In what town is Southampton Airport located?,(3) In what town does Rudy Sr. live?,"(4) Question: In what year did Ed Wood struggle to join the film industry?, Answer: In 1952",(5) In what town did Woody Grant run into Ed Pegram?,5,Woody. 001_161,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Tired of killing, war veteran Jefferson Waring rides west, but in Missouri he sees ""squatters"" mowed down by men working for rich, ruthless Artemus Taylor. He spends the night at Independence newspaperman Peter Sharpe's place, but is jailed when daughter Cathy Sharpe finds this total stranger in her room. The local marshal, John Harding, is just one of many men on Taylor's payroll. Peter's business is threatened by banker Stone unless he takes Taylor's side against ""squatters"" settling in the region. The blind and wheelchair-bound Taylor and ambitious daughter Norah are secretly aware that railroad surveyors are considering laying tracks nearby, so they want all the land for themselves. Jeff decides to leave. Norah and henchman Ding Bell intercept him; Norah shoots at him but misses. They take him to see Artemus, who tells a vocally reluctant Bell to take Jeff off to a remote canyon and murder him. Under Norah's instructions, Artemus's chief thug Sam Tobin goes after them to murder both; he wounds Jeff and kills Bell, but not before Bell hits him with a fatal shot. A doctor treats Jeff's wounds but Marshall Harding turns up and charges Jeff with the two killings. When the situation escalates and two of Taylor's thugs gun down Peter Sharpe, Jeff breaks out of jail and organizes a group of settlers to resist Taylor's planned big attack. The settlers slaughter Taylor's thugs; Taylor dies of a heart attack; Norah, having shot and she thinks killed banker Justin Stone in order to get some getaway money, is killed by him as she leaves. Jeff stays in town to run the paper with Cathy.",(1) What is the first name of the person that is hypnotized?,(2) What is the first name of the person that is noticed by Sasha?,(3) What is the first name of the person that is seduced by Denise?,(4) What is the first name of the person that is replaced by Ray Cooper?,(5) What is the first name of the person that is intercepted by Ding Bell?,5,Jeff. 001_460,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Grunge is generally characterized by a sludgy electric guitar sound with a ""thick"" middle register and rolled-off treble tone and a high level of distortion and fuzz, typically created with small 1970s-style stompbox pedals, with some guitarists chaining several fuzz pedals together and plugging them into a tube amplifier and speaker cabinet. Grunge guitarists use very loud Marshall guitar amplifiers and some used powerful Mesa-Boogie amplifiers, including Kurt Cobain and Dave Grohl (the latter in early, grunge-oriented Foo Fighters songs ). Grunge has been called the rock genre with the most ""lugubrious sound""; the use of heavy distortion and loud amps has been compared to a massive ""buildup of sonic fog"". or even dismissed as ""noise"" by one critic. As with metal and punk, a key part of grunge's sound is very distorted power chords played on the electric guitar.Whereas metal guitarists' overdriven sound generally comes from a combination of overdriven amplifiers and distortion pedals, grunge guitarists typically got all of their ""dirty"" sound from overdrive and fuzz pedals, with the amp just used to make the sound louder. Grunge guitarists tended to use the Fender Twin Reverb and the Fender Champion 100 combo amps (Cobain used both of these amps). The use of pedals by grunge guitarists was a move away from the expensive, studio-grade rackmount effects units used in other rock genres. The positive way that grunge bands viewed stompbox pedals can be seen in Mudhoney's use of the name of two overdrive pedals, the Univox Super-Fuzz and the Big Muff, in the title of their ""debut EP Superfuzz Bigmuff"". In the song Mudride, the band's guitars were said to have ""growled malevolently"" through its ""Cro-magnon slog"".",(1) What context do they use?,(2) What two brands of amplifiers do grunge guitarists use?,(3) What dataset do they use?,"(4) What is the name of the person who shows, through his playing skill, that grunge guitarists do not have to be sloppy players to rebel against mainstream music?",(5) What datasets do they use?,2,Marshall. 001_455,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," In 1814 Young first exchanged correspondence about the stone with Jean-François Champollion, a teacher at Grenoble who had produced a scholarly work on ancient Egypt. Champollion saw copies of the brief hieroglyphic and Greek inscriptions of the Philae obelisk in 1822, on which William John Bankes had tentatively noted the names ""Ptolemaios"" and ""Kleopatra"" in both languages. From this, Champollion identified the phonetic characters k l e o p a t r a (in today's transliteration q l i҆ w p ꜣ d r ꜣ.t). On the basis of this and the foreign names on the Rosetta Stone, he quickly constructed an alphabet of phonetic hieroglyphic characters, which appears in his famous 1822 ""Lettre à M. Dacier"" sent to Bon-Joseph Dacier, secretary of the Paris Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres and immediately published by the Académie. In the postscript Champollion notes that similar phonetic characters seemed to occur in both Greek and Egyptian names, a hypothesis confirmed in 1823, when he identified the names of pharaohs Ramesses and Thutmose written in cartouches at Abu Simbel. These far older hieroglyphic inscriptions had been copied by Bankes and sent to Champollion by Jean-Nicolas Huyot. From this point, the stories of the Rosetta Stone and the decipherment of Egyptian hieroglyphs diverge, as Champollion drew on many other texts to develop an Ancient Egyptian grammar and a hieroglyphic dictionary which were published after his death in 1832.",(1) What is the full name of the person who punches an MP?,(2) What is the full name of the person that meets a phonetic expert from India?,(3) What is the full name of the person who has an arrogant half-brother?,(4) What is the full name of the person who constructed an alphabet of phonetic hieroglyphic characters?,(5) What is the full name of the person who finds an alien spaceship?,4,Jean-François Champollion. 001_363,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," In September 1921, Beiderbecke enrolled at the Lake Forest Academy, a boarding school north of Chicago in Lake Forest, Illinois. While historians have traditionally suggested that his parents sent him to Lake Forest to discourage his interest in jazz, others believe that he may have been sent away in response to his arrest. Regardless, Mr. and Mrs. Beiderbecke apparently felt that a boarding school would provide their son with both the faculty attention and discipline required to improve his academic performance, necessitated by the fact that Bix had failed most courses at High School, remaining a junior in 1921 despite turning 18 in March of that year. His interests, however, remained limited to music and sports. In pursuit of the former, Beiderbecke often visited Chicago to listen to jazz bands at night clubs and speakeasies, including the infamous Friar's Inn, where he sometimes sat in with the New Orleans Rhythm Kings. He also traveled to the predominantly African-American South Side to listen to classic black jazz bands such as King Oliver's Creole Jazz Band, which featured Louis Armstrong on second cornet. ""Don't think I'm getting hard, Burnie,"" he wrote to his brother, ""but I'd go to hell to hear a good band."" On campus, he helped organize the Cy-Bix Orchestra with drummer Walter ""Cy"" Welge and almost immediately got into trouble with the Lake Forest headmaster for performing indecorously at a school dance. Beiderbecke often failed to return to his dormitory before curfew, and sometimes stayed off-campus the next day. In the early morning hours of May 20, 1922, he was caught on the fire escape to his dormitory, attempting to climb back into his room. The faculty voted to expel him the next day, due both to his academic failings and his extracurricular activities, which included drinking. The headmaster informed Beiderbecke's parents by letter that following his expulsion school officials confirmed that Beiderbecke ""was drinking himself and was responsible, in part at least, in having liquor brought into the School."" Soon after, Beiderbecke began pursuing a career in music.He returned to Davenport briefly in the summer of 1922, then moved to Chicago to join the Cascades Band, working that summer on Lake Michigan excursion boats. He gigged around Chicago until the fall of 1923, at times returning to Davenport to work for his father.",(1) What is the full name of the person whose parents died?,(2) What is the first name of the person whose parents sent him to Lake Forest to discourage his interest in jazz?,(3) What is the first name of the person whose mother tries to discourage her?,(4) What is the first name of the person whose parents and friends welcome him into the world?,(5) What is the full name of the person who sent a pilot to scout Lake Izabal?,2,Bix. 001_453,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Trapper Jed Cooper and his two best friends Gus and Mungo are relieved of their possessions by some unfriendly Indians, so they seek shelter at a nearby army fort, commanded by Captain Riordan. The captain recruits the three men as scouts. Also at the fort is Corrina Marston, waiting for her missing husband, Colonel Frank Marston. Jed quickly falls in love with Mrs. Marston, sensing her ambivalence about her husband; when the colonel returns, he is revealed to be an unmitigated tyrant. Colonel Marston is driven to redeem himself after a disastrous battle at Shiloh, where over a thousand of his men were killed unnecessarily. Marston wants to attack the regional Indian chief, Red Cloud, believing this will restore his good name and return him to the battle back east. He ignores the fact that most of the men at the fort are raw recruits, hopelessly outnumbered and completely unprepared for the vicious fighting they will face with the Indians. Jed is faced with the decision of letting Marston go on with his mad scheme, or finding a way to do away with him.",(1) What's the first name of the person whose wife Jed falls in love with?,(2) What's the first name of the person that the trapper falls in love with?,(3) What's the last name of the person whose wife is running her first marathon?,(4) What's the first name of the person the radio producer's secretary falls in love with?,(5) Who is the first person Zuleika falls in love with?,1,Corrina. 001_39,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," In 1919, the Chicago White Sox are considered one of the greatest baseball teams ever assembled; however, the team's stingy owner, Charles Comiskey, gives little inclination to reward his players for a spectacular season. Gamblers ""Sleepy"" Bill Burns and Billy Maharg get wind of the players' discontent, asking shady player Chick Gandil to convince a select group of Sox—including star knuckleball pitcher Eddie Cicotte, who led the majors with a 29–7 win–loss record and an earned run average of 1.82—that they could earn more money by playing badly and throwing the series than they could earn by winning the World Series against the Cincinnati Reds . Cicotte was motivated because Comiskey refused him a promised $10,000 should he win 30 games for the season. Cicotte was nearing the milestone until Comiskey ordered team manager Kid Gleason to bench him for 2 weeks (missing 5 starts) with the excuse that the 35-year-old veteran's arm needed a rest before the series. A number of players, including Gandil, Swede Risberg, and Lefty Williams, go along with the scheme. Shoeless Joe Jackson, an illiterate and the team hitting star is also invited, but is depicted as being not bright and not entirely sure of what is going on. Buck Weaver, meanwhile, insists that he is a winner and wants nothing to do with the fix.",(1) What is the first name of the person who was criticized for exposed cleavage?,(2) What is the first name of the person who was uneducated?,(3) What is the first name of the person who was cremated?,(4) What is the first name of the person who was wounded?,(5) What is the first name of the person who was benched for 2 weeks?,5,Eddie. 001_466,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Sally and Humphrey have just put a down payment on a house, when Sally loses her receptionist job after accidentally destroying the switchboard. She applies for a Fuller Brush franchise, but needs a reference from her former employer, Harvey Simpson. Meanwhile, Harvey is in trouble with his wife because he's come home with a suit coat smelling of Fuller Brush powder. Mrs. Simpson thinks her husband is having an affair, so Harvey calls Humphrey to have Sally go to Harvey's house and explain everything to his wife. With her reference letter depending on it, Sally goes to the house to find a bogus Mrs. Simpson, a dead body, and missing diamonds. Afraid the police will suspect her of foul play, Sally and Humphrey identify the real culprit and pursue her to her job dancing at a burlesque theater, and then onto a departing ocean liner. Hilarity ensues as the pair are chased around the ship by a criminal gang trying to silence them, while they hide variously in rooms filled with leaky wine barrels, bunches of bananas, and a talking parrot who nearly gives them away.",(1) Which of the Clasky's is having an affair?,(2) Whose is accused of having an affair?,(3) Whose wife is having an affair?,(4) Who denies having an affair?,(5) Whose married to the woman having an affair?,2,Sally. 001_196,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," little Judy, who is traveling with her selfish, uncaring father, David and her rich, callous, arrogant stepmother Rosemary. David only has Judy due to a court order and barely tolerates her presence. After their car is stuck in mud and the rain begins, they find a mansion. After breaking in, they are found by the owners, a kindly older couple, Gabriel and Hilary Hartwicke. Rosemary threw Judy's beloved teddy bear into the bushes while out in the rain, so Gabriel gifts her a new doll, Mr. Punch. They are invited to stay and while eating, Isabel and Enid (two British punk rocker hitchhikers) barge in with the person who picked them up, Ralph. Gabriel reveals himself to be a talented toy maker; their house is filled with dolls, puppets, and many other beautifully detailed and handmade toys. The Hartwickes invite the stranded travelers to join them to stay as guests until the storm ends and show them to their rooms.",(1) Whose presence threatens the soon-to-be bride's happiness?,(2) Whose presence is barely tolerated?,(3) Whose presence does David hardly tolerate?,(4) What can plants tolerate?,(5) Whose family is David sent to live with?,3,Hartwicke. 001_454,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," In 1814 Young first exchanged correspondence about the stone with Jean-François Champollion, a teacher at Grenoble who had produced a scholarly work on ancient Egypt. Champollion saw copies of the brief hieroglyphic and Greek inscriptions of the Philae obelisk in 1822, on which William John Bankes had tentatively noted the names ""Ptolemaios"" and ""Kleopatra"" in both languages. From this, Champollion identified the phonetic characters k l e o p a t r a (in today's transliteration q l i҆ w p ꜣ d r ꜣ.t). On the basis of this and the foreign names on the Rosetta Stone, he quickly constructed an alphabet of phonetic hieroglyphic characters, which appears in his famous 1822 ""Lettre à M. Dacier"" sent to Bon-Joseph Dacier, secretary of the Paris Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres and immediately published by the Académie. In the postscript Champollion notes that similar phonetic characters seemed to occur in both Greek and Egyptian names, a hypothesis confirmed in 1823, when he identified the names of pharaohs Ramesses and Thutmose written in cartouches at Abu Simbel. These far older hieroglyphic inscriptions had been copied by Bankes and sent to Champollion by Jean-Nicolas Huyot. From this point, the stories of the Rosetta Stone and the decipherment of Egyptian hieroglyphs diverge, as Champollion drew on many other texts to develop an Ancient Egyptian grammar and a hieroglyphic dictionary which were published after his death in 1832.",(1) What is the full name of the person who has an arrogant half-brother?,(2) What is the full name of the person who punches an MP?,(3) What is the full name of the person who finds an alien spaceship?,(4) What is the full name of the person that meets a phonetic expert from India?,(5) What is the full name of the person who constructed an alphabet of phonetic hieroglyphic characters?,5,Jean-François Champollion. 001_309,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," they are tolerant of salt, brackish, and fresh water; they grow in oxygen-poor soil; and they can survive drastic water-level changes. Black and white mangroves excrete salt from under their leaves, and red mangroves filter the salinity of sea water. All species are integral to coastline protection during severe storms. Red mangroves, for example, have far-reaching roots that trap sediments. The trees not only stabilize coastlines, but add land as more sand and decaying vegetation is trapped in the root systems. All three mangroves also absorb the energy of waves and storm surges. The estuaries act as fisheries for fry and nurseries for crustaceans. Shrimp, oysters, crabs, whelks, cockles, and snails thrive in these waters, as do primordial horseshoe crabs (Limulus polyphemus). The region supports a $59 million-a-year Tortugas pink shrimp (Farfantepenaeus duorarum) industry, and a $22 million-a-year stone crab (Menippe mercenaria) industry. Between 80 and 90 percent of species that are harvested commercially in Florida are born or spend time in the shallow waters near the Everglades. Oysters and mangroves work in tandem to build up the coastline. The sand around the coastline has minute white particles of quartz and fine shells. When currents are right, oysters grow in colonies or beds, and deposit their shells, reinforcing the bed. Mangrove seeds, called propagules, are full embryos and float in water until they reach a favorable location and take root, often on oyster beds. They shed skin and litter, ensuring other trees will not compete for space and nutrients.Mangroves also serve as excellent rookeries for birds. Wading birds, such as roseate spoonbills (Platalea ajaja), egrets, and tricolored herons (Egretta tricolor) use the mangroves as a nursery, due to the proximity of food sources and the protection offered from most prey. Thousands of birds can nest in the mangroves at once, making a noisy and messy colony, but their droppings fertilize the mangrove trees. Shorebirds like rails, terns and gulls; diving birds such as pelicans and grebes; and birds of prey such as ospreys, hawks and vultures are among the more than 100 species of birds that use Everglades mangrove trees to raise their young.",(1) Where is the world's largest mangrove ecosystem consisting of some of the highest density mangrove forests?,(2) Bayern is the German name for which region of Germany?,(3) What is the name of the region in which three species of mangrove trees exist?,(4) Why do mangrove trees rise high above the water? which characteristic help them to do so?,(5) What is the name of the symbiotic relationship in which one species benefits while the other species is not affected?,3,the Everglades. 001_405,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," York-born William Etty (1787–1849) had originally been an apprentice printer in Hull, but on completing his apprenticeship at the age of 18 moved to London to become an artist. Strongly influenced by the works of Titian and Rubens, he became famous for painting nude figures in biblical, literary and mythological settings. While many of his peers greatly admired him and elected him a full Royal Academician in 1828, others condemned the content of his work as indecent.Throughout his early career Etty was highly regarded by wealthy lawyer Thomas Myers, who had been educated at Eton College and thus had a good knowledge of classical mythology. From 1832 onwards Myers regularly wrote to Etty to suggest potential subjects for paintings. Myers was convinced that there was a significant market for very large paintings, and encouraged Etty to make such works. In 1834, he suggested the theme of Ulysses (""Odysseus"" in the original Greek) encountering the Sirens, a scene from the Odyssey in which a ship's crew sails past the island home of the Sirens. The Sirens were famous for the beauty of their singing, which would lure sailors to their deaths. Ulysses wanted to hear their song, so had his crew lash him to the ship's mast under strict orders not to untie him, after which they blocked their ears until they were safely out of range of the island.The topic of Ulysses encountering the Sirens was well suited to Etty's taste; as he wrote at the time, ""My aim in all my great pictures has been to paint some great moral on the heart ... the importance of resisting SENSUAL DELIGHTS"". In his depiction of the scene, he probably worked from Alexander Pope's translation, ""Their song is death, and makes destruction please. / Unblest the man whom music wins to stay / Nigh the curs'd shore, and listen to the lay ... In verdant meads they sport, and wide around / Lie human bones that whiten all the ground. / The ground polluted floats with human gore / And human carnage taints the dreadful shore."".",(1) What is the first name of the person Myers wrote to regularly?,(2) What is the first name of the person that Orville wrote the song for?,(3) What is the full name of the person responsible for John Myers meeting Hellboy?,(4) What is the first name of the person who wrote the word to Amazing Grace?,(5) What is the first name of the person who wrote a letter to Major Thomas Trafford?,1,Etty. 001_194,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Middle-class Princeton student Tom Townsend, an admirer of Charles Fourier, attends a debutante dress ball one evening on a whim. After the ball, a mix-up leads to his meeting a small group of young Upper East Side socialites known as the Sally Fowler Rat Pack, after the girl whose apartment they use for after-hours parties. Believing that they accidentally stole a taxi from Tom, they decide to invite him to their after-hours party, to prevent ill feelings. Tom decides to attend the party, and befriends several other attendees, including Nick Smith, a cynic who takes Tom under his wing; Audrey, a shy girl who enjoys Regency era literature and has a crush on Tom; and Charlie, an overly philosophical friend with an unrequited love for Audrey. Tom learns that he and the Rat Pack have some common friends, including his ex-girlfriend Serena Slocumb, with whom he remains infatuated. Under Nick's tutelage, Tom ingratiates himself to the Rat Pack and soon becomes a full-fledged member. Much of the film is composed of dialogues in which Tom and the Rat Pack discuss the nebulous social scene they occupy, including how they are coming of age just as the culture in which they were raised is ending, leaving them with uncertain social futures. During these discussions, Tom reveals that he, too, was raised wealthy, but that his father abandoned the family to marry another woman, leaving Tom and his mother with limited financial resources. As a result, Tom harbors a love-hate relationship with wealth and the upper class.",(1) What is the last name of the person whose apartment Abel breaks into?,(2) What is the first name of the person whose mind is probed?,(3) What is the first name of the girl whose apartment is used for after-hour parties?,(4) What is the last name of the girl whose dad is addicted to laudanum?,(5) whose first name is susie?,3,Sally Fowler Rat Pack. 001_343,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Travel agency clerk Tommy Bradford delivers tickets to wealthy J. Westley Piermont at the lavish wedding of his daughter. Piermont introduces him to model June Evans, but neglects to mention neither one is a guest. June is there to help the daughter with her wedding dress. Both pretend to be rich. Tommy gives June his telephone number, but neither expects anything to come of their momentary attraction to each other. That night, after she tells her family about her adventure, her obnoxious, younger, musician brother Chick phones Tommy, pretending to be June's servant, and forces his sister to continue the charade. Tommy is pressured to maintain the masquerade as well by his roommate Al, an insurance salesman who dreams of making contacts in New York high society. They begin seeing each other. Their first date is at the Westminster Dog Show, where they run into Piermont again. He has two dogs entered in the competition. Piermont insists his Pomeranian will win, but Tommy champions his other entry, a St. Bernard. Sure of himself, the millionaire promises to give the St. Bernard to Tommy if it wins. It does, and he does. With no place to keep it, Tommy makes a present of it to June. Their second date is at a movie theater where another of June's brothers works. By this point, June's family is anxious to meet her boyfriend. Her aunt Lucy is the housekeeper for a wealthy family, so while her employers are away, she borrows their home to host a dinner. Afterward, Tommy tries to confess to June, but she misunderstands and thinks he has found her out instead. Outraged by what she thinks are insults aimed at her family, she breaks up with him.","(1) What is the full name of the person who released a solo album, TheFutureEmbrance, in June 2005?",(2) What is the last name of the person who introduces Pru to Clive?,(3) What is the full name of the person who introduces Tommy to model June Evans?,(4) What is the full name of the person that holidayed in Kenya with Mal Evans?,(5) What is the full name of the person who promises to give Tommy the St. Bernard if it wins?,3,J. Westley Piermont. 001_148,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," At last, the newly crowned King of Denmark, Edvard, and his wife and Queen, Dr. Paige Morgan, find time to fly to Belavia for their secret honeymoon. They spend their Christmas holidays at a ski resort, but as they take a tour of Belavia's natural beauty, Eddie and Paige discover that the evil Prime Minister Polonius has given orders to bulldoze the precious forests to drill for oil. Paige and Eddie decide they must do everything they can to save the forest, even if it means putting aside their honeymoon. Then, the couple bump into Paige's ex-boyfriend, Scott, a journalist. Eddie immediately becomes jealous. Even though Edvard suspects Scott cannot be trusted, Eddie and Paige ask him for help with the media to try and stop the minister's evil plans. Scott, however, is being controlled by the evil minister, who tells him to spy on the couple. Scott tries to back out, but fails. Eddie tries to get an audience with the prince of Belavia, but fails, so he and Paige go to the Holiday Ball. Meanwhile, Scott tries to kiss Paige and says he is sorry he let her go. Disgusted, Paige walks away and goes to find Eddie, only to find him drunk.",(1) What is the first name of the person that takes refuge with Denise?,(2) What is the first name of the person who takes the guitar and clothes?,(3) What is the first name of the person who takes to peeping into windows?,(4) What is the name of the person who disgusted Paige?,(5) What is the first name of the person who takes a tour of Belavia's natural beauty with Paige?,5,Prime Minister Polonius. 001_52,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Michael is looking for a woman who likes to play games, but when he finds Suzanne, he discovers to his cost that she may be more than he bargained for, especially since common sense does not show itself to be one of his assets or advantages. Once Michael meets Suzanne, they strike up a relationship which proves to be intense. Their first date takes them, first, to a restaurant, then into an alley where they fool around for a bit. They go back to his place to fool around some more. She then leaves. The next day, both attend a business meeting, during whose course Suzanne plays footsie with Michael. They return to his residence to fool around in his bathtub, then move onto his bed to try to fool around some more. But Suzanne flees and boards a taxi. This causes Michael, still naked under a bathrobe, to run after the cab taking Suzanne away. These actions reveal Suzanne to be very selfish, and Michael to be rather stupid in the practical sense. Arrested for indecent exposure, Michael places two telephone calls seeking release on bail. The first, to Suzanne, is without success. The second, to Nick, one of his friends, yields results. Suzanne then lures Michael to a motel bed and leaves him cuffed there to the bed naked while she leaves to go back to work to attend a meeting. She returns to him and they have sex on the motel bed.",(1) Who is investigating Nick?,(2) Who has a friend named Nick?,(3) What is the full name of the person who has a friend named Susan?,(4) What is the full name of the person who has a friend named Rachel?,(5) Who has a boyfriend named Hans?,2,Suzanne. 001_253,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Μακεδονία, Makedonía), also called Macedon (), was an ancient kingdom on the periphery of Archaic and Classical Greece, and later the dominant state of Hellenistic Greece. The kingdom was founded and initially ruled by the royal Argead dynasty, which was followed by the Antipatrid and Antigonid dynasties. Home to the ancient Macedonians, the earliest kingdom was centered on the northeastern part of the Greek peninsula, and bordered by Epirus to the west, Paeonia to the north, Thrace to the east and Thessaly to the south. Before the 4th century BC, Macedonia was a small kingdom outside of the area dominated by the great city-states of Athens, Sparta and Thebes, and briefly subordinate to Achaemenid Persia. During the reign of the Argead king Philip II (359–336 BC), Macedonia subdued mainland Greece and Thrace through conquest and diplomacy. With a reformed army containing phalanxes wielding the sarissa pike, Philip II defeated the old powers of Athens and Thebes in the Battle of Chaeronea in 338 BC. Philip II's son Alexander the Great, leading a federation of Greek states, accomplished his father's objective of commanding the whole of Greece when he destroyed Thebes after the city revolted. During Alexander's subsequent campaign of conquest, he overthrew the Achaemenid Empire and conquered territory that stretched as far as the Indus River. For a brief period, his empire was the most powerful in the world – the definitive Hellenistic state, inaugurating the transition to a new period of Ancient Greek civilization. Greek arts and literature flourished in the new conquered lands and advances in philosophy, engineering, and science spread throughout much of the ancient world. Of particular importance were the contributions of Aristotle, tutor to Alexander, whose writings became a keystone of Western philosophy. After Alexander's death in 323 BC, the ensuing wars of the Diadochi, and the partitioning of Alexander's short-lived empire, Macedonia remained a Greek cultural and political center in the Mediterranean region along with Ptolemaic Egypt, the Seleucid Empire, and the Kingdom of Pergamon. Important cities such as Pella, Pydna, and Amphipolis were involved in power struggles for control of the territory. New cities were founded, such as Thessalonica by the usurper Cassander (named after his wife Thessalonike of Macedon). Macedonia's decline began with the Macedonian Wars and the rise of Rome as the leading Mediterranean power. At the end of the Third Macedonian War in 168 BC, the Macedonian monarchy was abolished and replaced by Roman client states. A short-lived revival of the monarchy during the Fourth Macedonian War in 150–148 BC ended with the establishment of the Roman province of Macedonia.",(1) What is the full name of the person that had the most powerful empire in the world?,(2) What is the full name of the person that had interest in Hindu philosophy?,(3) What is the full name of the person that had practised in Greece and Palestine?,(4) What is the full name of the person that had their drawings reproduced?,(5) Who is the de facto most powerful person in Europe?,1,Aristotle. 001_375,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Deep in the African jungle, a tribe of aboriginal warriors are having a celebration. Their leader is a tall man in a white cloak. Secretly, he's a Nazi commander, and the tribe's sacred temple is actually an underground Nazi outpost. The Nazis eagerly await the arrival of an American convoy with information about an Allied attack. When a military plane flies overhead, the Nazis shoot it down. The commander sends the warriors to search for survivors. At the wreck site, the mortally wounded Lieutenant hands his secret documents to the crew's only survivor, Lois Lane. He tells her to destroy the documents. Then he dies. Lois is caught by the natives and tied up, but frees herself, runs into the jungle and avoids capture long enough to hide the documents under a rock. She is then captured and brought back to the temple for interrogation where she is tied to a chair. When she refuses to talk, the commander orders the warriors to burn her at the stake. Meanwhile, Clark Kent and another pilot are flying out to meet with Lois' convoy. They spot the wrecked plane not far from the aboriginal village. Clark parachutes down to investigate. Once on the ground, he changes into Superman. He flies to the village. Lois is already being burned at the stake with the commander watching her. Just then, one of the warriors approaches the commander and gives him a set of papers. It's the documents Lois hid in the woods. Overjoyed with success, the commander has his men radio headquarters and send the Nazi U-boats to attack the Allied fleet. Superman arrives and saves Lois from burning to death. When the warriors see a man who can walk through fire, they run in terror. The Nazi soldiers futilely fight back against Superman. Meanwhile, Lois takes a spare white cloak and sneaks in to use the radio. The commander catches her but before he can do anything to stop her, Superman comes to her rescue. She sends a message to the American headquarters, warning them about the Nazi subs.",(1) What is the full name of the person who is engaged to Lois Clarke?,(2) What is the rank of the person who tells Lois to destroy the documents?,(3) What is the rank of the person who dies before Lois is caught by natives?,(4) What is the name of the person who is having an affair with Lois Grey?,(5) What is the last name of the person who tells the Bigfoot to flee?,2,Lieutenant. 001_326,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," I decided then and there that the symphonies of Beethoven and Brahms were the only music for me, not the music of this crazy Russian. ... My one desire was to flee that room and find a quiet corner in which to rest my aching head. Then [Diaghilev] turned to me and with a smile said, ""This is a masterpiece, Monteux, which will completely revolutionize music and make you famous, because you are going to conduct it."" And, of course, I did. Despite his initial reaction, Monteux worked with Stravinsky, giving practical advice to help the composer to achieve the orchestral balance and effects he sought. Together they worked on the score from March to May 1913, and to get the orchestra of the Théâtre des Champs-Élysées to cope with the unfamiliar and difficult music Monteux held seventeen rehearsals, an unusually large number. Monteux's real attitude to the score is unclear. In his old age he told a biographer, ""I did not like Le Sacre then. I have conducted it fifty times since. I do not like it now."" However, he told his wife in 1963 that the Rite was ""now fifty years old, and I do not think it has aged at all. I had pleasure in conducting the fiftieth anniversary of Le Sacre this spring"".",(1) What is the first name of the person that is referred to as American Girl Reporter?,"(2) name a person or character who is referred to as ""lady.""",(3) What is the full name of the person Monteux was married to prior to 1928?,"(4) What is the name of the person that was referred to as an ""English"" photographerreferred to as an ""English"" photographer?",(5) What is the name of the person Monteux referred to as a crazy Russian?,5,Monteux. 001_207,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," William Etty was born in 1787 in York, the son of a miller and baker. He showed artistic promise from an early age, but his family were financially insecure, and at the age of 12 he left school to become an apprentice printer in Hull. On completing his seven-year indenture he moved to London ""with a few pieces of chalk-crayons in colours"", with the aim of emulating the Old Masters and becoming a history painter. Etty gained acceptance to the Royal Academy Schools in early 1807. After a year spent studying under renowned portrait painter Thomas Lawrence, Etty returned to the Royal Academy, drawing at the life class and copying other paintings. In 1821 the Royal Academy exhibited one of Etty's works, The Arrival of Cleopatra in Cilicia (also known as The Triumph of Cleopatra). The painting was extremely well received, and many of Etty's fellow artists greatly admired him. He was elected a full Royal Academician in 1828, ahead of John Constable. He became well respected for his ability to capture flesh tones accurately in painting and for his fascination with contrasts in skin tones. Following the exhibition of Cleopatra, Etty attempted to reproduce its success, concentrating on painting further history paintings containing nude figures. He exhibited 15 paintings at the Summer Exhibition in the 1820s (including Cleopatra), and all but one contained at least one nude figure. In so doing Etty became the first English artist to treat nude studies as a serious art form in their own right, capable of being aesthetically attractive and of delivering moral messages. Although some nudes by foreign artists were held in private English collections, Britain had no tradition of nude painting, and the display and distribution of nude material to the public had been suppressed since the 1787 Proclamation for the Discouragement of Vice. The supposed prurient reaction of the lower classes to his nude paintings caused concern throughout the 19th century. Many critics condemned his repeated depictions of female nudity as indecent, although his portraits of male nudes were generally well received. (Etty's male nude portraits were primarily of mythological heroes and classical combat, genres in which the depiction of male nudity was considered acceptable in England.) From 1832 onwards, needled by repeated attacks from the press, Etty remained a prominent painter of nudes but made conscious efforts to try to reflect moral lessons in his work.",(1) What is the first name of the person whose family name needed restoring?,(2) What is the full name of the person whose family was killed?,(3) What is the last name of the person whose family is falling apart?,(4) What is the last name of the person whose family was financially insecure?,(5) What is the last name of the person whose chancellor was Marigliani?,4,Etty. 001_476,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Former model Maria Wyeth, who comes from a Nevada town with a population of 28, is now a successful actress. But she is unhappily married to, and separated from, temperamental producer Carter Lang and also chronically depressed and institutionalized. Reflecting back on what brought her here, Maria recalls driving around Los Angeles in her yellow Chevrolet Corvette and spending time with her closest friend, B.Z. Mendenhall, an unhappy man who is gay. Maria has a brain-damaged daughter, Kate, who is being kept in a sanitarium at the insistence of Carter, who resents Maria visiting the girl so frequently. Maria's secret desire is to live somewhere with Kate and find some kind of joy in life together. Maria has been having an affair with Les Goodwin, a screenwriter. When she tells Carter she is pregnant, he demands she get an abortion. Maria goes to Las Vegas and has a fling with a mob-connected lawyer, Larry Kulik, and later returns to L.A. and has a one-night stand with Johnny Waters, a television star who needs to watch his own show on TV to get in the mood. Bored and depressed, Maria steals Johnny's car and speeds off. When she is stopped by police, drugs are found in the car and she is placed under arrest. Her spirits at an all-time low, Maria returns to Las Vegas and finds that B.Z. is equally unhappy. When he swallows a handful of pills and washes them down with vodka, rather than call for help, Maria cradles him and watches him die. Back at her institution, a psychiatrist asks why she keeps on playing, when knowing what 'nothing' (nihilism) means. Maria replies, ""Why not?"".",(1) What is the full name of the person who initially planned to work as a producer?,(2) What is the full name of the person who is married to Joan?,(3) What is the full name of the person who married Anne Scott-James?,(4) What is the full name of the person who was married to Maria?,(5) What is the full name of the person who is unhappily married to a temperamental producer?,5,Maria. 001_112,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Jack Griffith, known as ""Papa"" to all, is a family man in a Texas town, but an irresponsibly eccentric one when he has had a drink too many. To impress his six-year-old daughter Corinne, he spends the family's savings to buy his own circus, simply so the little girl can have her own pony. His elder daughter Augusta becomes distraught as her father makes some questionable business deals under the influence of alcohol. This causes strife within the Griffith household and makes her beau's father (the local bank president) forbid his son to associate with the Griffith family. After his squandering leaves the Griffiths in debt, wife Ambolyn packs up Augusta and Corinne and moves to Texarkana, Texas, where her father, Anthony Ghio, is the mayor. Griffith attempts to use his circus to help Ghio's bid for reelection, but accidentally causes Ambolyn to end up with a broken hand. Despondent, he leaves for Louisiana and is little seen or heard from by the family. Talked into an attempt at reconciliation, Papa is reluctant, believing the Griffiths want nothing more to do with him, but he is welcomed back with open arms.",(1) What is the last name of the person who spends the family's savings to buy his own circus?,(2) What is the last name of the person who published under his own name?,(3) What is the last name of the person who had to make his own fortunes?,(4) What is the last name of the person who spends $84 on a hooker?,(5) What is the last name of the person who got attacked by his own traps?,1,Griffith. 001_149,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," At last, the newly crowned King of Denmark, Edvard, and his wife and Queen, Dr. Paige Morgan, find time to fly to Belavia for their secret honeymoon. They spend their Christmas holidays at a ski resort, but as they take a tour of Belavia's natural beauty, Eddie and Paige discover that the evil Prime Minister Polonius has given orders to bulldoze the precious forests to drill for oil. Paige and Eddie decide they must do everything they can to save the forest, even if it means putting aside their honeymoon. Then, the couple bump into Paige's ex-boyfriend, Scott, a journalist. Eddie immediately becomes jealous. Even though Edvard suspects Scott cannot be trusted, Eddie and Paige ask him for help with the media to try and stop the minister's evil plans. Scott, however, is being controlled by the evil minister, who tells him to spy on the couple. Scott tries to back out, but fails. Eddie tries to get an audience with the prince of Belavia, but fails, so he and Paige go to the Holiday Ball. Meanwhile, Scott tries to kiss Paige and says he is sorry he let her go. Disgusted, Paige walks away and goes to find Eddie, only to find him drunk.",(1) What is the first name of the person who takes a tour of Belavia's natural beauty with Paige?,(2) What is the first name of the person that takes refuge with Denise?,(3) What is the name of the person who disgusted Paige?,(4) What is the first name of the person who takes the guitar and clothes?,(5) What is the first name of the person who takes to peeping into windows?,1,Edvard. 001_450,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," If a guy loses a girl and wants her back, he gets in touch with Tank and pays him to take the girl on a bad date. Throughout the evening Tank inevitably behaves in the most moronic fashion causing the girl to realize that her ex was not really such a bad guy after all and get back to their ex. He shares an apartment with his step cousin Dustin who has fallen for his colleague Alexis. Dustin takes Alexis on a date and confesses his love but she insists they remain friends. After the date Dustin explains his situation to Tank who volunteers his services as a good friend (instead of having to pay for his services as usual). Dustin initially turns him down, not wanting Tank to be close to Alexis, but the next day sees Alexis flirting with another co-worker and begs Tank to take Alexis out. He accepts. Tank bumps into Alexis and they arrange to go out. He behaves badly all night but Alexis is too drunk to care. When he drops her off she expects him to come in but he resists the temptation out of loyalty to Dustin. Alexis calls Dustin but when they meet she explains that her date with Tank has motivated her to see other men. Dustin sends Alexis roses and an apology poem in Tank's name. Alexis calls Tank at work and berates him for leaving early the previous night. Tank goes to see Alexis and they end up having casual sex on a regular basis while Dustin begins a series of desperate attempts to stay friends with her after all.",(1) What is the full name of the person who has a father who disapproves of their friends?,(2) What is the name of the person who must remain handcuffed to his father?,(3) What is the name of the person who insists that she and Dustin remain friends?,"(4) Question: Who does Ester insists that she loves her and that she is wrong?, Answer: Anna","(5) What is the first name of the person who tries to remain friends with Alexis, despite the fact that she is sleeping with Tank?",3,Alexis. 001_15,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Philip Arnold Heseltine (30 October 1894 – 17 December 1930), known by the pseudonym Peter Warlock, was a British composer and music critic. The Warlock name, which reflects Heseltine's interest in occult practices, was used for all his published musical works. He is best known as a composer of songs and other vocal music; he also achieved notoriety in his lifetime through his unconventional and often scandalous lifestyle. As a schoolboy at Eton College, Heseltine met the British composer Frederick Delius, with whom he formed a close friendship. After a failed student career in Oxford and London, Heseltine turned to musical journalism, while developing interests in folk-song and Elizabethan music. His first serious compositions date from around 1915. Following a period of inactivity, a positive and lasting influence on his work arose from his meeting in 1916 with the Dutch composer Bernard van Dieren; he also gained creative impetus from a year spent in Ireland, studying Celtic culture and language. On his return to England in 1918, Heseltine began composing songs in a distinctive, original style, while building a reputation as a combative and controversial music critic. During 1920–21 he edited the music magazine The Sackbut. His most prolific period as a composer came in the 1920s, when he was based first in Wales and later at Eynsford in Kent. Through his critical writings, published under his own name, Heseltine made a pioneering contribution to the scholarship of early music. In addition, he produced a full-length biography of Frederick Delius and wrote, edited, or otherwise assisted the production of several other books and pamphlets. Towards the end of his life, Heseltine became depressed by a loss of his creative inspiration. He died in his London flat of coal gas poisoning in 1930, probably by his own hand.",(1) What is the last name of the person who recorded several albums of original music?,(2) What is the last name of the person who is best known as a composer of songs and other vocal music?,(3) What is the last name of the person who is best known for his mid-period allegorical landscapes?,(4) What is the last name of the person who took vocal lessons with J.E. Hutchinson?,(5) What is the last name of the person who was employed as a court composer at Brunswick in 1694?,2,Philip. 001_423,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Lithuania had a centuries long tradition of statehood following the coronation of Mindaugas the King of Lithuania. After the last Partition of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1795, Lithuania was annexed by the Russian Empire. During the 19th century, both the Lithuanians and the Poles attempted to restore their independence. Lithuanians rebelled during the 1830 November Uprising and the 1863 January Uprising, but their first real opportunity arose when both Russia and Germany were weakened during World War I.In 1915, Germany occupied western parts of the Russian Empire. After the Russian Revolution in 1917, Germany conceived the geopolitical strategy of Mitteleuropa – a regional network of puppet states that would serve as a buffer zone – and agreed to allow the Vilnius Conference, hoping that it would proclaim that the Lithuanian nation wanted to detach itself from Russia and establish a closer relationship with Germany. However, this strategy backfired; the conference, held on 18–22 September 1917, adopted a resolution that an independent Lithuania should be established and that a closer relationship with Germany would be conditional on Germany's formal recognition of the new state. On 21 September, the 214 attendees at the conference elected a 20-member Council of Lithuania to codify this resolution. The German authorities did not allow that resolution to be published, but they did permit the Council to proceed. The Vilnius Conference also resolved that a constituent assembly be elected ""in conformity with democratic principles by all the inhabitants of Lithuania"".",(1) where was the hockey event held,(2) What was the name of the event where a resolution was adopted that established an independent Lithuania?,(3) name an olympic event that has a judge.,(4) name an event where you might find ticket scalpers.,(5) What event was established in 1094?,2,Council of Lithuania. 001_60,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," the Violin Concerto, Op. 33 is a middle-period work, from 1911, which lies within the tradition of European classicism, whereas the Flute Concerto (without opus number) of 1926 and the Clarinet Concerto, Op. 57 which followed in 1928 are late works, influenced by the modernism of the 1920s and, according to the Danish musicologist Herbert Rosenberg, the product of ""an extremely experienced composer who knows how to avoid inessentials."" Unlike Nielsen's later works, the Violin Concerto has a distinct, melody-oriented neo-classical structure. The Flute Concerto, in two movements, was written for the flautist Holger Gilbert-Jespersen, a member of the Copenhagen Wind Quintet which had premiered Nielsen's Wind Quintet (1922). In contrast to the rather traditional style of the Violin Concerto, it reflects the modernistic trends of the period. The first movement, for example, switches between D minor, E-flat minor and F major before the flute comes to the fore with a cantabile theme in E major. The Clarinet Concerto was also written for a member of the Copenhagen Wind Quintet, Aage Oxenvad. Nielsen stretches the capacities of instrument and player to the utmost; the concerto has just one continuous movement and contains a struggle between the soloist and the orchestra and between the two principal competing keys, F major and E major.The wind concertos present many examples of what Nielsen called objektivering (""objectification""). By this term he meant giving instrumentalists freedom of interpretation and performance within the bounds set out by the score.",(1) What are the last names of the three people killed by the alien?,(2) What are the names of Satan's three sons?,(3) What are the first names of the three Luftons?,(4) What are the three names of the Daoist fouder?,(5) What are the names of the three concertos written by Nielsen?,5,Copenhagen Wind Quintet. 001_186,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Forty-eight Non-Indian people visited Yosemite Valley in 1855, including San Francisco writer James Mason Hutchings and artist Thomas Ayres. Hutchings wrote an article about his experience that was published in the July 12, 1855, issue of the Mariposa Gazette and Ayres' sketch of Yosemite Falls was published in late 1855; four of his drawings were presented in the lead article of the July 1856 and initial issue of Hutchings' Illustrated California Magazine. The article and illustrations created tourist interest in Yosemite and eventually led to its protection.Ayres returned in 1856 and visited Tuolumne Meadows in the area's high country. His highly detailed angularly exaggerated artwork and his written accounts were distributed nationally and an art exhibition of his drawings was held in New York City. Hutchings took photographer Charles Leander Weed to Yosemite Valley in 1859; Weed took the first photographs of the valley's features, which were presented to the public in a September exhibition held in San Francisco. Hutchings published four installments of ""The Great Yo-semite Valley"" from October 1859 to March 1860 in his magazine and re-published a collection of these articles in his Scenes of Wonder and Curiosity in California, which remained in print into the 1870s. Carleton Watkins exhibited his 17 by 22 in (43 by 56 cm) Yosemite views at the 1867 Paris International Exposition.Photographer Ansel Adams made his first trip to Yosemite in 1916; his photographs of the valley made him famous in the 1920s and 1930s. Adams willed the originals of his Yosemite photos to the Yosemite Park Association, and visitors can still buy direct prints from his original negatives. The studio in which the prints are sold was established in 1902 by artist Harry Cassie Best.Milton and Houston Mann opened a toll road to Yosemite Valley in 1856, up the South Fork of the Merced River. They charged the then considerable sum of two dollars per person until the road was bought by Mariposa County, after which it became free. In 1856, settler Galen Clark discovered the Mariposa Grove of giant sequoia at Wawona, an indigenous encampment in what is now the southwestern part of the park. Clark completed a bridge over the South Fork of the Merced River in 1857 at Wawona for traffic headed toward Yosemite Valley and provided a way station for travelers on the road the Mann brothers built to the valley.Simple lodgings, later called the Lower Hotel, were completed soon afterward; the Upper Hotel, later renamed Hutchings House and eventually known as Cedar Cottage, was opened in 1859. In 1876, the more substantial Wawona Hotel was built to serve tourists visiting the nearby grove of big trees and those on their way to Yosemite Valley. Aaron Harris opened the first campground business in Yosemite in 1876.",(1) Who was traveling to Yosemite Valley?,(2) What is the last name of the person from whose original negatives visitors to Yosemite can still buy prints?,"(3) Question: What is the name of the prison?, Answer: Yosemite Sam",(4) What is the last name of the person whose original Yosemite photos were willed to the Yosemite Park Association?,(5) What is another name for the Yosemite Freeway?,4,Milton. 001_427,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," It is implied that, in the future, all plant life on Earth has become extinct. As many specimens as possible have been preserved in a series of enormous, greenhouse-like geodesic domes, attached to a large spaceship named ""Valley Forge"", forming part of a fleet of American Airlines space freighters, currently just outside the orbit of Saturn. Freeman Lowell, one of four crewmen aboard, is the resident botanist and ecologist who carefully preserves a variety of plants for their eventual return to Earth and the reforestation of the planet. Lowell spends most of his time in the domes, both cultivating the crops and attending to the animal life. The crew receives orders to jettison and destroy the domes (with nuclear charges) and return the freighters to commercial service. After four of the six domes are jettisoned and blown up Lowell rebels and opts instead to save the plants and animals on his ship. Lowell kills one of his crew-mates who arrives to plant explosives in his favorite dome, and his right leg is seriously injured in the process. He then jettisons and triggers the destruction of one of the remaining domes, trapping and killing the remaining two crewmen. Enlisting the aid of the ship's three ""drones"" (service robots), Huey, Dewey and Louie (named after Donald Duck's nephews), Lowell stages a fake premature explosion as a ruse and sends the Valley Forge careening towards Saturn in an attempt to hijack the ship and flee with the last forest dome. He then reprograms the drones to perform surgery on his leg and sets the Valley Forge on a risky course through Saturn's rings. Later, as the ship endures the rough passage, Drone 3 (Louie) is lost, but the ship and its remaining dome emerge relatively undamaged on the other side of the rings. Lowell and the surviving drones, Huey and Dewey, set out into deep space to maintain the forest. Lowell reprograms Huey and Dewey to plant trees and play poker. Lowell begins speaking to them constantly, as if they are children.",(1) What are the names of the two drones that are not lost?,(2) What are the names of the two hitman?,(3) What are the first names of the two that are reconciled?,(4) What are the names of the two films that feature whales?,(5) What are the names of the two officers that John overpowers?,1,Huey. 001_29,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.,"15 a.m. Neighbours later reported sounds of movement and of a piano in the early morning. When Peache, who had been away, returned early on 17 December, she found the doors and windows bolted, and smelled coal gas. The police broke into the flat and found Heseltine unconscious; he was declared dead shortly afterwards, apparently as the result of coal gas poisoning.An inquest was held on 22 December; the jury could not determine whether the death was accidental or suicide and an open verdict was returned. Most commentators have considered suicide the more likely cause; Heseltine's close friend Lionel Jellinek and Peache both recalled that he had previously threatened to take his life by gas and the outline of a new will was found among the papers in the flat. Much later, Nigel Heseltine introduced a new theory—that his father had been murdered by Van Dieren, the sole beneficiary of Heseltine's 1920 will, which stood to be revoked by the new one. This theory is not considered tenable by most commentators. The suicide theory is supported (arguably), by the (supposed, accepted) fact that Heseltine/Warlock had put his young cat outside the room before he had turned on the lethal gas.Philip Heseltine was buried alongside his father at Godalming cemetery on 20 December 1930. In late February 1931, a memorial concert of his music was held at the Wigmore Hall; a second such concert took place in the following December.In 2011 the art critic Brian Sewell published his memoirs, in which he claimed that he was Heseltine's illegitimate son, born in July 1931 seven months after the composer's death. Sewell's mother, unnamed, was an intermittent girlfriend, a Roman Catholic who refused Heseltine's offer to pay for an abortion and subsequently blamed herself for his death. Sewell was unaware of his father's identity until 1986.",(1) What is the last name of the person who was wanted to train as a future court composer?,(2) What is the last name of the person who rents an apartment?,(3) What is the last name of the person who transcribed the music of an English composer?,(4) What is the last name of the person who was an orphan?,(5) What is the last name of the person who Wilfrid Mellers predicted a leading role in the future of English music for?,3,Heseltine. 001_241,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Billy leads a traveling troupe that jousts on motorcycles. ""King William"", as he styles himself, tries to lead the troupe according to his Arthurian ideals. However, the constant pressure of balancing those ideals against the modern day realities and financial pressures of running the organization are beginning to strain the group. Billy is also plagued by a recurring dream of a black bird. Tensions are exacerbated by Billy's constantly pushing himself despite being injured and the arrival of a promoter named Bontempi, who wants to represent the troupe. After Billy spends a night in jail watching a member of his troupe beaten because Billy has refused a payoff to a corrupt local cop, Billy returns to the fairground where the troupe is next to perform and is shocked that some members want to join with the promoter. His sense of betrayal is heightened when his queen, Linet, admits that her feelings for him may not be the reason she remains with the troupe. Things come to a head after Morgan, leader of the dissident faction who believes he should be king, wins the day's tournament and a fight breaks out between the troupe and rowdy members of the crowd. Billy faces an Indian rider with a black eagle crest on his breast plate, the black bird of his dreams. Billy defeats the Indian but aggravates his injury; later commissioning the Indian as a knight in his troupe. Morgan and several other riders leave the troupe to follow Bontempi. Billy's loyal supporter Alan also departs with his new girlfriend Julie and friend Bors to try to sort out his emotions. Billy and the remainder of the troupe settle at the fairground to await the dissidents' return.",(1) What title is held by the man whom the King puts in charge to set up general elections?,(2) What Fred cannot pay?,(3) What is the occupation of the man who murders Buchanan?,(4) What occupation is held by the man whom Billy refused to pay?,(5) What occupation is held by Flaxy Martin's boyfriend?,4,black. 001_298,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format., The Genius of Osbert Lancaster.,(1) What is the last name of the person who was a British national from birth?,(2) What is the last name of the person who is best known for his mid-period allegorical landscapes?,(3) What is the last name of the person who was known for his cartoons in the British press?,(4) What is the last name of the person who was known for their fascination with contrasts in skin tones?,(5) What is the first name of the person who is known for his reclusiveness?,3,Lancaster. 001_404,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," York-born William Etty (1787–1849) had originally been an apprentice printer in Hull, but on completing his apprenticeship at the age of 18 moved to London to become an artist. Strongly influenced by the works of Titian and Rubens, he became famous for painting nude figures in biblical, literary and mythological settings. While many of his peers greatly admired him and elected him a full Royal Academician in 1828, others condemned the content of his work as indecent.Throughout his early career Etty was highly regarded by wealthy lawyer Thomas Myers, who had been educated at Eton College and thus had a good knowledge of classical mythology. From 1832 onwards Myers regularly wrote to Etty to suggest potential subjects for paintings. Myers was convinced that there was a significant market for very large paintings, and encouraged Etty to make such works. In 1834, he suggested the theme of Ulysses (""Odysseus"" in the original Greek) encountering the Sirens, a scene from the Odyssey in which a ship's crew sails past the island home of the Sirens. The Sirens were famous for the beauty of their singing, which would lure sailors to their deaths. Ulysses wanted to hear their song, so had his crew lash him to the ship's mast under strict orders not to untie him, after which they blocked their ears until they were safely out of range of the island.The topic of Ulysses encountering the Sirens was well suited to Etty's taste; as he wrote at the time, ""My aim in all my great pictures has been to paint some great moral on the heart ... the importance of resisting SENSUAL DELIGHTS"". In his depiction of the scene, he probably worked from Alexander Pope's translation, ""Their song is death, and makes destruction please. / Unblest the man whom music wins to stay / Nigh the curs'd shore, and listen to the lay ... In verdant meads they sport, and wide around / Lie human bones that whiten all the ground. / The ground polluted floats with human gore / And human carnage taints the dreadful shore."".",(1) What is the first name of the person who wrote a letter to Major Thomas Trafford?,(2) What is the first name of the person who wrote the word to Amazing Grace?,(3) What is the full name of the person responsible for John Myers meeting Hellboy?,(4) What is the first name of the person Myers wrote to regularly?,(5) What is the first name of the person that Orville wrote the song for?,4,Etty. 001_213,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Elements of Bush's lyrics employ historical or literary references, as embodied in her first single ""Wuthering Heights"", which is based on Emily Brontë's novel of the same name. She has described herself as a storyteller who embodies the character singing the song and has dismissed efforts by others to conceive of her work as autobiographical. Bush's lyrics have been known to touch on obscure or esoteric subject matter, and New Musical Express noted that Bush was not afraid to tackle sensitive and taboo subjects in her work. ""The Kick Inside"" is based on a traditional English folk song (The Ballad of Lucy Wan) about an incestuous pregnancy and a resulting suicide. ""Kashka from Baghdad"" is a song about a homosexual male couple; Out magazine listed two of her albums in their ""Top 100 Greatest Gayest Albums"" list. She has referenced G. I. Gurdjieff in the song ""Them Heavy People"", while ""Cloudbusting"" was inspired by Peter Reich's autobiography, A Book of Dreams, about his relationship with his father, Wilhelm Reich. ""Breathing"" explores the results of nuclear fallout from the perspective of a fœtus.Other non-musical sources of inspiration for Bush include horror films, which have influenced the gothic nature of her songs, such as ""Hounds of Love"", which samples the 1957 horror movie Night of the Demon. ""The Infant Kiss"" is a song about a haunted, unstable woman's paedophilic infatuation with a young boy in her care (inspired by Jack Clayton's film The Innocents (1961), which had been based on Henry James's novella The Turn of the Screw);. Her songs have occasionally combined comedy and horror to form dark humour, such as murder by poisoning in ""Coffee Homeground"", an alcoholic mother in ""Ran Tan Waltz"" and the upbeat ""The Wedding List"", a song inspired by François Truffaut's 1967 film of Cornell Woolrich's The Bride Wore Black about the death of a groom and the bride's subsequent revenge against the killer. Bush has also cited comedy as a significant influence. She has cited Woody Allen, Monty Python, Fawlty Towers, and The Young Ones as particular favourites.","(1) What is the last name of the person who referred to Heavy as a Really Heavy Thing as ""basically a collection,"" and deemed its production poor?",(2) What is the last name of the person who has released two Contemporary Christian music albums?,"(3) What is the last name of the person who released ""Them Heavy People?""?",(4) What is the last name of the person who released Ça Ira in 2005?,(5) What is the last name of the person who released Scary Monsters and Super Creeps?,3,Bush. 001_171,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," During the late 12th century, about 100 years after the Norman conquest (1066), the Normans have removed the native ruling class, replacing it with a new monarchy, aristocracy and clerical hierarchy. Thomas Becket is a Saxon protégé and facilitator to the carousing King Henry II, who transforms into a man who continually invokes the ""honour of God"". Henry appoints Becket Lord Chancellor to have a close confidant in this position whom he can completely control. Instead, Becket becomes a major thorn in his side in a jurisdictional dispute. Henry finds his duties as king and his stale arranged marriage to be oppressive, and is described as the ""perennial adolescent"" by the Bishop of London. Henry is more interested in escaping his duties through drunken forays onto the hunting grounds and local brothels. He is increasingly dependent on Becket, a Saxon commoner, who arranges these debaucheries when he is not busy running Henry's court. This foments great resentment on the part of Henry's Norman noblemen, who distrust and envy this Saxon upstart, as well as the queen and Henry's mother, who see Becket as an unnatural and unseemly influence upon the royal personage. Henry finds himself in continuous conflict with the elderly Archbishop of Canterbury, who opposes the taxation of Church property to support Henry's military campaigns in France (""Bishop, I must hire the Swiss Guards to fight for me – and no one has ever paid them off with principles!""). During one of his campaigns in coastal France, he receives word that the old archbishop has ""gone to God's bosom"". In a burst of inspiration, Henry exercises his prerogative to pick the next Archbishop and informs an astonished Becket that he is the royal choice.",(1) What is the first name of the person who becomes best pals with the crusty rancher's horse?,(2) What is the last name of the person who becomes a guest at a luxury chateau?,(3) What is the first name of the person who becomes a primary suspect?,(4) What is the first name of the person who composed major works for the organ?,(5) What is the first name of the person who becomes a major thorn in Henry's side?,5,King Henry II. 001_141,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," ""Déjà Vu"" debuted to mixed and positive reviews among critics. Mike Joseph of the international webzine PopMatters' believed that it was ""fantastic to hear Beyoncé singing her lungs out over a full-bodied groove featuring live instruments"". Spence D. of IGN Music, a multimedia news and reviews website, complimented Jerkins' bass-laden groove, writing that it brought the track to perfection. Describing ""Déjà Vu"" as a magnificent song, Caroline Sullivan of The Guardian complimented Beyoncé and Jay-Z collaboration calling it ""feverish as pre-watershed pop gets"". She added that even though when Jay-Z is not physically present, he manages to bring out something formidable in Beyoncé that evokes ""the young, feral Tina Turner"". Bernard Zuel The Sydney Morning Herald praised the assertiveness with which Beyoncé delivers her lines and considered buying ""Déjà Vu"" as worthwhile.Several other music critics have compared ""Déjà Vu"" to Beyoncé's 2003 single, ""Crazy in Love"", the lead single of her debut album. According to Gail Mitchell of Billboard magazine, the song is viewed by many as a sequel to ""Crazy in Love"". Jason King of the Vibe magazine deemed the song as ""cloned from the DNA of the raucous 'Crazy in Love'"" while Thomas Inskeep of Stylus Magazine referred to it as ""'Crazy in Love' lite"". Some reviewers, however, were negative to the parallels drawn between the two songs. Andy Kellman of AllMusic, an online music database, wrote that ""['Déjà Vu'] ""had the audacity to not be as monstrous as 'Crazy in Love'"", referring to the commercial success the latter experienced in 2003. The internet-based publication Pitchfork's writer Ryan Dombal claimed that ""this time [Beyoncé] out-bolds the beat"".Sasha Frere-Jones of The New Yorker deemed the lyrics as a ""perplexing view of memory"", while Chris Richards of The Washington Post characterized Beyoncé as a ""love-dazed girlfriend"" in the song. Jody Rosen of the Entertainment Weekly referred to ""Déjà Vu"" as an ""oddly flat"" choice as a lead single. Jaime Gill of Yahoo! Music regarded ""Déjà Vu"" as a good choice for a single but concluded that it does lack ""the kind of killer chorus"" to suggest that Beyoncé would take one further step ""to outright global domination"". On the other hand, Jon Pareles of The New York Times wrote that Jay-Z shows up ""as calmly boastful as ever"" in the song but he only makes Beyoncé's ""sound more insecure"". Kelefa Sanneh of the same publication noted that ""the refrain doesn't give Beyoncé a chance really to show off"" and further described the song as a ""fair-to-middling single from a singer who is the opposite of desperate"".",(1) How many consoles did Edge compare?,(2) who is beyond compare?,(3) What type of music did critics associate with corrupt high culture?,(4) name a body part that many songs mention.,(5) What is the name of the two songs that many music critics compare?,5,The New York Times. 001_296,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format., The Genius of Osbert Lancaster.,(1) What is the last name of the person who was known for his cartoons in the British press?,(2) What is the first name of the person who is known for his reclusiveness?,(3) What is the last name of the person who was a British national from birth?,(4) What is the last name of the person who is best known for his mid-period allegorical landscapes?,(5) What is the last name of the person who was known for their fascination with contrasts in skin tones?,1,Lancaster. 001_200,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," little Judy, who is traveling with her selfish, uncaring father, David and her rich, callous, arrogant stepmother Rosemary. David only has Judy due to a court order and barely tolerates her presence. After their car is stuck in mud and the rain begins, they find a mansion. After breaking in, they are found by the owners, a kindly older couple, Gabriel and Hilary Hartwicke. Rosemary threw Judy's beloved teddy bear into the bushes while out in the rain, so Gabriel gifts her a new doll, Mr. Punch. They are invited to stay and while eating, Isabel and Enid (two British punk rocker hitchhikers) barge in with the person who picked them up, Ralph. Gabriel reveals himself to be a talented toy maker; their house is filled with dolls, puppets, and many other beautifully detailed and handmade toys. The Hartwickes invite the stranded travelers to join them to stay as guests until the storm ends and show them to their rooms.",(1) What can plants tolerate?,(2) Whose presence is barely tolerated?,(3) Whose family is David sent to live with?,(4) Whose presence threatens the soon-to-be bride's happiness?,(5) Whose presence does David hardly tolerate?,5,Judy. 001_218,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," In 1917, Stan and Ollie are drafted into the American Expeditionary Force to fight in World War I. Their ineptitude during basic training antagonizes the drill sergeant and they are assigned to kitchen duties. They misunderstand the cook's instructions and empty the garbage cans into the general's private dining room. The cook, who is thrown in the stockade with them, curses their ""snitching"" and threatens them with violence after they are released. They escape his wrath when they are shipped to the trenches in France. Serving close to the front line, they befriend soldier Eddie Smith, who receives a Dear John letter from his wife. When Eddie is killed in action, the boys determine to rescue Eddie's daughter from her brutal foster father and deliver her to Eddie's parents. They distinguish themselves in combat by losing control of a tank and accidentally forcing a German platoon into the open. After the Armistice, Stan and Ollie venture to New York City to retrieve the girl and look for Eddie's parents. Using the city telephone directory, the task proves both monumental and problematic as the boys blindly attempt to visit each Smith until they find the grandparents. After taking punches from an annoyed prizefighter and disrupting a society wedding, they resort to telephoning first. While operating their lunch wagon, the boys are approached by an unpleasant civil servant who demands Eddie's child so that she can be placed in an orphanage. The boys refuse, and the man says he will return with the police to have the boys arrested. They try to secure a loan with their lunch wagon to finance their escape to another city, but the banker smirks that he'd have to be unconscious to make such a deal. While laughing, he topples a bust onto his own head and knocks himself out. Taking this as approval, the boys take what they need from the bank vault.",(1) What are the last names of the people who are planning to murder Nick?,(2) What are the names of the people Flosshilde pretends to chastise?,(3) What are the names of the people who kiss?,(4) What are the full names of the people who are invited to a party?,(5) What are the names of the people shipped to France?,5,Stan. 001_274,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," During Edward II's reign (1307–1327) there was relatively little activity at the Tower of London. However, it was during this period that the Privy Wardrobe was founded. The institution was based at the Tower and responsible for organising the state's arms. In 1321, Margaret de Clare, Baroness Badlesmere became the first woman imprisoned in the Tower of London after she refused Queen Isabella admittance to Leeds Castle and ordered her archers to fire upon Isabella, killing six of the royal escort. Generally reserved for high-ranking inmates, the Tower was the most important royal prison in the country. However it was not necessarily very secure, and throughout its history people bribed the guards to help them escape. In 1323 Roger Mortimer, Baron Mortimer, was aided in his escape from the Tower by the Sub-Lieutenant of the Tower who let Mortimer's men inside. They hacked a hole in his cell wall and Mortimer escaped to a waiting boat. He fled to France where he encountered Edward's Queen. They began an affair and plotted to overthrow the King. One of Mortimer's first acts on entering England in 1326 was to capture the Tower and release the prisoners held there. For four years he ruled while Edward III was too young to do so himself; in 1330, Edward and his supporters captured Mortimer and threw him in the Tower. Under Edward III's rule (1312–1377) England experienced renewed success in warfare after his father's reign had put the realm on the backfoot against the Scots and French. Amongst Edward's successes were the battles of Crécy and Poitiers where King John II of France was taken prisoner, and the capture of the King David II of Scotland at Neville's Cross. During this period, the Tower of London held many noble prisoners of war. Edward II had allowed the Tower of London to fall into a state of disrepair, and by the reign of Edward III the castle was an uncomfortable place. The nobility held captive within its walls were unable to engage in activities such as hunting which were permissible at other royal castles used as prisons, for instance Windsor. Edward III ordered that the castle should be renovated.",(1) Who is given a car to help escape?,(2) Where did people bribe the guards to help them escape?,(3) name something people buy to help them sleep better.,(4) Why didn't Equality face guards when he attempted to escape?,(5) name someplace people go to help them think.,2,Tower of London. 001_374,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Deep in the African jungle, a tribe of aboriginal warriors are having a celebration. Their leader is a tall man in a white cloak. Secretly, he's a Nazi commander, and the tribe's sacred temple is actually an underground Nazi outpost. The Nazis eagerly await the arrival of an American convoy with information about an Allied attack. When a military plane flies overhead, the Nazis shoot it down. The commander sends the warriors to search for survivors. At the wreck site, the mortally wounded Lieutenant hands his secret documents to the crew's only survivor, Lois Lane. He tells her to destroy the documents. Then he dies. Lois is caught by the natives and tied up, but frees herself, runs into the jungle and avoids capture long enough to hide the documents under a rock. She is then captured and brought back to the temple for interrogation where she is tied to a chair. When she refuses to talk, the commander orders the warriors to burn her at the stake. Meanwhile, Clark Kent and another pilot are flying out to meet with Lois' convoy. They spot the wrecked plane not far from the aboriginal village. Clark parachutes down to investigate. Once on the ground, he changes into Superman. He flies to the village. Lois is already being burned at the stake with the commander watching her. Just then, one of the warriors approaches the commander and gives him a set of papers. It's the documents Lois hid in the woods. Overjoyed with success, the commander has his men radio headquarters and send the Nazi U-boats to attack the Allied fleet. Superman arrives and saves Lois from burning to death. When the warriors see a man who can walk through fire, they run in terror. The Nazi soldiers futilely fight back against Superman. Meanwhile, Lois takes a spare white cloak and sneaks in to use the radio. The commander catches her but before he can do anything to stop her, Superman comes to her rescue. She sends a message to the American headquarters, warning them about the Nazi subs.",(1) What is the full name of the person who is engaged to Lois Clarke?,(2) What is the rank of the person who tells Lois to destroy the documents?,(3) What is the rank of the person who dies before Lois is caught by natives?,(4) What is the last name of the person who tells the Bigfoot to flee?,(5) What is the name of the person who is having an affair with Lois Grey?,2,Clark Kent. 001_271,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," A Late Preclassic tomb has been excavated, believed to be a royal burial. This tomb has been designated Burial 1; it was found during excavations of Structure 7A and was inserted into the centre of this Middle Preclassic structure. The burial is also associated with Stela 13 and with a massive offering of more than 600 ceramic vessels and other artifacts found at the base of Structure 7A. These ceramics date the offering to the end of the Late Preclassic. No human remains have been recovered but the find is assumed to be a burial due to the associated artifacts. The body is believed to have been interred upon a litter measuring 1 by 2 metres (3.3 by 6.6 ft), which was probably made of wood and coated in red cinnabar dust. Grave goods include an 18-piece jade necklace, two earspools coated in cinnabar, various mosaic mirrors made from iron pyrite, one consisting of more than 800 pieces, a jade mosaic mask, two prismatic obsidian blades, a finely carved greenstone fish, various beads that presumably formed jewellery such as bracelets and a selection of ceramics that date the tomb to AD 100–200.In October 2012, a tomb carbon-dated between 700 BC and 400 BC was reported to have been found in Takalik Abaj of a ruler nicknamed K'utz Chman (""Grandfather Vulture"" in Mam) by archaeologists, a sacred king or ""big chief"" who ""bridged the gap between the Olmec and Mayan cultures in Central America,"" according to Miguel Orrego. The tomb is suggested to be the oldest Maya royal burial to have been discovered so far.",(1) What date is associated with Satanikhil massacre?,(2) What is associated with Stela 13?,(3) What party is associated with blue?,(4) Who is Number 13?,(5) What is the only metalloid in group 13?,2,Takalik Abaj. 001_96,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Hundreds of songs and performers have entered Melodifestivalen since its debut. Although songwriters living outside Sweden were once not allowed to enter Melodifestivalen, the 2012 contest marked the first time foreign songwriters could submit entries, provided that they collaborated with a Swedish songwriter. To be eligible, songwriters and performers must be at least sixteen years of age on the day of the first Eurovision semi-final.Until 2001, participation in the festival was limited to a single night. The number of contestants ranged from five to twelve. A two-round system was used intermittently between 1981 and 1998, in which all but five of the contestants were eliminated in a first round of voting. Failure to reach the second round under this system was seen as a major failure for a prominent artist; when Elisabeth Andreassen failed to qualify in 1984, it almost ended her career. The introduction of weekly semi-finals in 2002 increased the number of contestants to thirty-two. At least ten of the contestants must perform in Swedish. A CD of each year's competing songs has been released since 2001, and a DVD of the semi-finals and final since 2003. Melodifestivalen has been the launch-pad for the success of popular local acts, such as Anne-Lie Rydé, Tommy Körberg, and Lisa Nilsson. The competition has played host to performers from outside Sweden, including Baccara, Alannah Myles, Katrina Leskanich, and Cornelis Vreeswijk. Melodifestivalen participants have also represented—and unsuccessfully tried to represent—other countries at Eurovision. While local success for Melodifestivalen winners is common, most contestants return to obscurity and few have major international success. The impact that the competition makes on the Swedish charts means an artist need not win the competition to earn significant domestic record sales. For example, the song which finished last at Melodifestivalen 1990, ""Symfonin"" by Loa Falkman, topped the Swedish singles chart. The most recent occurrence was 2016 with Samir & Viktor's song ""Bada Nakna"". In 2007, twenty-one participants reached Sverigetopplistan. The week after the 2008 final, songs from the festival made up the entire top fifteen on the domestic singles chart.","(1) After Anita left her home, what career did she pursue?",(2) Burke failed to show concern for what sect of Christianity?,(3) Elisabeth Andreassen's career almost ended when she failed to qualify for what contest?,(4) How old was Elisabeth and Fritzl when Elisabeth was taken?,(5) who failed to qualify for euro2016?,3,Bada Nakna. 001_134,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," on one side were the ultraconservatives, and on the other, the moderate conservatives who supported the Conciliation. The ultraconservatives were led by Joaquim Rodrigues Torres, Viscount of Itaboraí, Eusébio de Queirós and Paulino Soares de Sousa, 1st Viscount of Uruguai—all former ministers in the 1848–1853 cabinet. These elder statesmen had taken control of the Conservative Party after Paraná's death. In the years following 1857, none of the cabinets survived long. They quickly collapsed due to the lack of a majority in the Chamber of Deputies.",(1) What is the full name of the person that was invited to Shane Powers party?,(2) What is the full name of the person who invited several liberals to join the conservative ranks?,(3) What is the full name of the person who recruited several regulars of Blitz to be in a video?,(4) What is the first name of the person who managed several breweries?,(5) What is the full name of the person who owned the home that was moved several times?,2,"Honório Hermeto Carneiro Leão, Marquis of Paraná." 001_465,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Huddie Ledbetter leaves his father's house just barely into his twenties and arrives at a brothel on Fannin' Street ran by Miss Eula, who nicknames him Leadbelly and has him play at the bar. For a while, she takes care of him until the police arrive, breaking up a party. Leadbelly and an old man escape via a train and Leadbelly buys a twelve-string acoustic guitar from the old man. Seeking work, he takes a job picking cotton. He soon leaves on a train to Silver City where he meets Blind Lemon and they start playing shows together. At one show, a drunken man tells Leadbelly to keep playing, and threatens him. Leadbelly responds by smashing his guitar onto him and is arrested. He escapes from jail and leads a normal life until he and a drunken friend are playing around with a gun, and Leadbelly accidentally shoots him. He is thrown in prison where he is forced to work in a chain gang. When he tries to escape, he is caught and put in a box. His father arrives and tries to bail Leadbelly out, but fails. Before leaving, he manages to convince the warden to get Leadbelly a twelve-string acoustic guitar. After getting the new guitar, he plays a song for Governor Pat Neff who reassures Leadbelly he will be set free. After he leaves prison, he returns to Fannin Street, sees it has lost its former glory, and he is reunited with Miss Eula. He returns to his father's home only to find that a new family lives there. A group of men attack Leadbelly and slash his throat. Leadbelly happens to stab and kill a man in self-defense but is thrown back in prison. John and Alan Lomax visit the prison and interview Leadbelly, having him play all his songs for them. After he finishes telling his life story, they tell him they will see what they can do about getting him out of prison. The film ends with a title card stating that Leadbelly was released from prison and pursued his music career.",(1) What's the full name of the person Josie wants to run away with?,(2) What's the full name of the person that the captain of the football team break up with?,(3) What's the full name of the person the crossword puzzle writer is obsessed with?,"(4) What's the full name of the person who hits ""Dave""?",(5) What's the full name of the person Blind Lemon plays shows with?,5,Huddie Ledbetter. 001_372,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," A former police detective and Vietnam veteran in New Orleans and a recovering alcoholic, Dave Robicheaux, is living a quiet life in the swamplands of Louisiana with his wife Annie. The couple's tranquility is shattered one day when a drug smuggler's plane crashes in a lake, right before their eyes. Robicheaux succeeds in rescuing a lone survivor, a Salvadoran girl, whom he and Annie quickly adopt and name Alafair. With the arrival of a DEA officer named Dautrieve and an inherent connection to Bubba Rocque, the leading drug kingpin in the area and Robicheaux's childhood friend from New Iberia, Dave becomes involved in solving the case and consequently finds himself and his family in danger. Robicheaux is assaulted by two thugs as a warning. With help from his former girl-friend Robin, an exotic dancer who still has feelings for him, he continues to investigate. His longtime acquaintance Bubba denies any involvement, but Dave warns him and Bubba's sultry wife Claudette that he is going to find out who is behind all this and do something about it. He tracks down one of the men who attacked him, Eddie Keats, and splits his head open with a pool cue in Keat's own bar. Killers come to the Robicheaux home late one night. Robicheaux is unable to prevent his wife Annie from being killed. He falls off the wagon and neglects the young girl they adopted. Robin comes to stay with them. Clearing his head, Robicheaux seeks vengeance against the three killers. He first goes after a large man called Toot, chasing him onto a streetcar and causing his death. Bubba and Claudette reassure a local mob boss named Giancano that they will not let this vendetta get out of hand, and Bubba gets into a fistfight with Robicheaux, falsely suspecting him of an affair with Claudette. Eddie Keats is found dead before Robicheaux can get to him. Going after the last and most dangerous of the killers, Victor Romero, he knows that someone else must be giving them orders.",(1) What are the full names of the people whose dust was inhaled?,(2) What are the full names of the people whose car was damaged?,(3) What are the full names of the people whose tranquility is shattered when a plane crashes in a lake before their eyes?,(4) What are the full names of the people who are informed about their new assignment through a woman?,(5) What are the full names of the people in the band whose mint-condition records fetch a high price?,3,Dave Robicheaux. 001_113,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Jack Griffith, known as ""Papa"" to all, is a family man in a Texas town, but an irresponsibly eccentric one when he has had a drink too many. To impress his six-year-old daughter Corinne, he spends the family's savings to buy his own circus, simply so the little girl can have her own pony. His elder daughter Augusta becomes distraught as her father makes some questionable business deals under the influence of alcohol. This causes strife within the Griffith household and makes her beau's father (the local bank president) forbid his son to associate with the Griffith family. After his squandering leaves the Griffiths in debt, wife Ambolyn packs up Augusta and Corinne and moves to Texarkana, Texas, where her father, Anthony Ghio, is the mayor. Griffith attempts to use his circus to help Ghio's bid for reelection, but accidentally causes Ambolyn to end up with a broken hand. Despondent, he leaves for Louisiana and is little seen or heard from by the family. Talked into an attempt at reconciliation, Papa is reluctant, believing the Griffiths want nothing more to do with him, but he is welcomed back with open arms.",(1) What is the last name of the person who got attacked by his own traps?,(2) What is the last name of the person who published under his own name?,(3) What is the last name of the person who spends $84 on a hooker?,(4) What is the last name of the person who had to make his own fortunes?,(5) What is the last name of the person who spends the family's savings to buy his own circus?,5,Griffith. 001_370,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," A former police detective and Vietnam veteran in New Orleans and a recovering alcoholic, Dave Robicheaux, is living a quiet life in the swamplands of Louisiana with his wife Annie. The couple's tranquility is shattered one day when a drug smuggler's plane crashes in a lake, right before their eyes. Robicheaux succeeds in rescuing a lone survivor, a Salvadoran girl, whom he and Annie quickly adopt and name Alafair. With the arrival of a DEA officer named Dautrieve and an inherent connection to Bubba Rocque, the leading drug kingpin in the area and Robicheaux's childhood friend from New Iberia, Dave becomes involved in solving the case and consequently finds himself and his family in danger. Robicheaux is assaulted by two thugs as a warning. With help from his former girl-friend Robin, an exotic dancer who still has feelings for him, he continues to investigate. His longtime acquaintance Bubba denies any involvement, but Dave warns him and Bubba's sultry wife Claudette that he is going to find out who is behind all this and do something about it. He tracks down one of the men who attacked him, Eddie Keats, and splits his head open with a pool cue in Keat's own bar. Killers come to the Robicheaux home late one night. Robicheaux is unable to prevent his wife Annie from being killed. He falls off the wagon and neglects the young girl they adopted. Robin comes to stay with them. Clearing his head, Robicheaux seeks vengeance against the three killers. He first goes after a large man called Toot, chasing him onto a streetcar and causing his death. Bubba and Claudette reassure a local mob boss named Giancano that they will not let this vendetta get out of hand, and Bubba gets into a fistfight with Robicheaux, falsely suspecting him of an affair with Claudette. Eddie Keats is found dead before Robicheaux can get to him. Going after the last and most dangerous of the killers, Victor Romero, he knows that someone else must be giving them orders.",(1) What are the full names of the people whose dust was inhaled?,(2) What are the full names of the people whose tranquility is shattered when a plane crashes in a lake before their eyes?,(3) What are the full names of the people in the band whose mint-condition records fetch a high price?,(4) What are the full names of the people who are informed about their new assignment through a woman?,(5) What are the full names of the people whose car was damaged?,2,Alafair. 001_47,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," In the years following the eruption, despite earning rapid fame and opportunities to research internationally in Japan, New Zealand, and Guadeloupe, Glicken still failed to obtain a job at USGS. Senior employees at the Survey found his behavioral oddities unsettling. Activity at Mount St. Helens diminished, prompting USGS to reduce CVO's budget and contemplate closing the station. He continued helping the Survey until 1989, also serving as an assistant researcher at the University of California at Santa Barbara.From 1989 to 1991, Glicken continued his volcanological studies in Japan as a postdoctoral fellow at the Earthquake Research Institute of the University of Tokyo, supported by grants from the U.S. National Science Foundation. Later, while a research professor and translator at Tokyo Metropolitan University, Glicken became involved with research at Mount Unzen. The volcano had recently resumed eruptive activity in November 1990, after being dormant for 198 years. In the months after its first activity, it erupted sporadically, and the government evacuated its vicinity near the end of May 1991. On June 2, 1991, Glicken visited the mountain with Katia and Maurice Krafft. The three entered a danger zone near the base of the volcano the following day, assuming that any potentially hazardous pyroclastic flows would follow a turn in the landscape and safely bypass them. Later that day, a lava dome collapsed, sending a large flow down the valley at 60 miles per hour (97 km/h). The current reached the turn before separating into two parts, and the upper, hotter part swiftly overcame the volcanologists' post, killing them upon impact. In total, 41 or 42 people died in the incident, including press members who had been watching the volcanologists. The volcano burned down 390 houses, and the remains of the flow extended 2.5 miles (4 km) in length. Glicken's remains were found four days later, and were cremated according to his parents' wishes. To date, Glicken and Johnston are the only American volcanologists known to have been killed by a volcanic eruption.",(1) What is the last name of the American volcanologist that has died along with the man continued his volcanological studies in Japan?,(2) What is the last name of the person who died in his flat?,(3) name something that a man had better not take along on his honeymoon,(4) What is the last name of the person who continued in the Prince-Archbishop's service?,(5) What is the last name of the two other people who died on the mountain with the volcanologist who failed to obtain a job at USGS?,1,41. 001_222,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," a clumsy plagiarism of the Russian School"" and called Ravel a ""mediocrely gifted debutant ... who will perhaps become something if not someone in about ten years, if he works hard."" Another critic, Pierre Lalo, thought that Ravel showed talent, but was too indebted to Debussy and should instead emulate Beethoven. Over the succeeding decades Lalo became Ravel's most implacable critic.From the start of his career, Ravel appeared calmly indifferent to blame or praise. Those who knew him well believed that this was no pose but wholly genuine. The only opinion of his music that he truly valued was his own, perfectionist and severely self-critical. At twenty years of age he was, in the words of the biographer Burnett James, ""self-possessed, a little aloof, intellectually biased, given to mild banter."" He dressed like a dandy and was meticulous about his appearance and demeanour. Orenstein comments that, short in stature, light in frame, and bony in features, Ravel had the ""appearance of a well-dressed jockey"", whose large head seemed suitably matched to his formidable intellect. During the late 1890s and into the early years of the next century, Ravel was bearded in the fashion of the day; from his mid-thirties he was clean-shaven.",(1) Whose teachers were key influences on their development as a composer?,(2) What are the first names of the two people who were dismissed as the Beatles' lawyers?,(3) What are the names of the two people who played a joke on Nigel?,(4) What are the names of Ravel's two teachers who were key influences on his development as a composer?,(5) What are the last names of the two people who Palmer said were obvious influences to Curtis?,4,Pavane for a dead princess. 001_380,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," a lullaby, now lost, and a polka which the composer mentioned in his autobiography. As his parents did not believe he had any future as a musician, they apprenticed him to a shopkeeper from a nearby village when he was fourteen; the shopkeeper went bankrupt by midsummer and Nielsen had to return home. After learning to play brass instruments, on 1 November 1879 he became a bugler and alto trombonist in the band of the army's 16th Battalion at nearby Odense.Nielsen did not give up the violin during his time with the battalion, continuing to play it when he went home to perform at dances with his father. The army paid him three kroner and 45 øre and a loaf of bread every five days for two and a half years, after which his salary was raised slightly, enabling him to buy the civilian clothes he needed to perform at barn dances.",(1) What is the full name of the person whose father was murdered?,(2) What is the first name of the person whose father was a herdsman and a farmer?,(3) What is the first name of the person whose parent was a musician?,(4) What is the full name of the person whose father was arrested?,(5) What is the the name of the person whose father was a house painter and traditional musician?,5,Nielsen. 001_257,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," In Verona Beach, the Capulets and Montagues are rivals. The animosity of the older generation—Fulgencio and Gloria Capulet and Ted and Caroline Montague—is felt by their younger relatives. A gunfight between Montagues led by Benvolio, Romeo's cousin, and Capulets led by Tybalt, Juliet's cousin, creates chaos in the city. The Chief of Police, Captain Prince, reprimands the families, warning them that their lives ""shall pay the forfeit of the peace"". Benvolio and Romeo learn of a Capulet party that evening which they decide to gate-crash. Romeo agrees on hearing that Rosaline, with whom he is in love, is attending. They meet their friend, Mercutio, who has tickets to the party, and Romeo takes ecstasy as they proceed to the Capulet mansion. The effects of the drug and the party overwhelm Romeo, who goes to the restroom. While admiring an aquarium, he sees Juliet on the other side, and the two instantly fall in love, both unaware who the other is. Tybalt spots Romeo and vows to kill him for invading his family's home. After Romeo leaves the party, he and Juliet each learn that they belong to feuding families, but Romeo sneaks back to see her. Juliet tells him that if he sends word by the following day, they will be betrothed. The next day, Romeo asks Father Laurence to marry them, and he agrees, hoping their marriage will end the feud. Romeo passes the word on via Juliet's nurse and the lovers are married. Tybalt encounters Mercutio and Romeo at the beach. Romeo attempts to make peace, but Tybalt assaults him. Mercutio intervenes and is about to kill Tybalt when Romeo stops him. Tybalt uses the opportunity to inflict a deadly wound on Mercutio, who curses both houses before dying. Enraged, Romeo chases after a fleeing Tybalt and guns him down.",(1) How many policemen were in the gunfight?,(2) Who leads the group of people who have faith in the Oversoul?,(3) Who is the cousin of the man who leads the Montagues in a gunfight?,(4) Who does the man that hates his cousin take a liking to?,(5) Who is wounded during the gunfight?,3,Capulet. 001_67,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Following the accession of James VII in 1685, Bruce gradually fell from favour, and was distrusted by the new regime. After the Revolution of 1688, and the accession of William of Orange as King, he was once again at odds with his Protestant rulers, and he refused to take up his seat in Parliament. As a staunch Episcopalian, Bruce was considered a potential Jacobite threat. In 1693 he was briefly imprisoned in Stirling Castle for refusing to appear before the Privy Council. He was incarcerated again at Stirling in 1694, and from 1696 in Edinburgh Castle. Bruce was expelled from parliament in 1702, his seat passing to his son John Bruce. Despite these imprisonments, he continued his architectural work, indeed the 1690s and 1700s were his most prolific years. Bruce was imprisoned at Edinburgh Castle again in 1708 and was only released a short time before his death, at the beginning of 1710.He was buried in the family mausoleum at Kinross Kirk. The ruins of the church still stand beside Kinross House, the mausoleum remains intact in the churchyard. Dating from 1675 it is probably by William Bruce in design, initially to house his parents. Bruce's surviving account books show purchases of books on music, painting and horticulture, as well as numerous foreign-language works, suggesting that William Bruce was a learned man. He studied horticulture extensively, and applied his knowledge of the subject in his own gardens at Kinross. He was a friend of James Sutherland of the Edinburgh Botanic Garden, and may have known John Evelyn and other English horticulturalists.",(1) What is the full name of the person that was a schoolteacher?,(2) What is the full name of the person that was imprisoned by Louis III?,(3) What was the full name of the person that was charged by a police dog?,(4) What is the full name of the person that was distrusted by the new regime?,(5) What is the full name of the person that was spurned by Alexander?,4,William Bruce. 001_244,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," At a bar, Deb Clarington, a camera operator for the local news, sees an attractive man, Ryan Waverly. Although initially too insecure to approach him, her friend Ruby talks her into it. While awkwardly hitting on him, Deb is interrupted by Ryan's fiance, who breaks up with him when he refuses to accept a high-paying job at his father's company. The next thing Deb knows, she wakes in Ryan's bed with a hangover. Ryan asks her to leave, and after several attempts to seduce him, she reluctantly agrees, seeing people attack and cannibalize each other. Deb saves Ryan from a zombie attack, and they return to his apartment. Deb once again attempts to seduce Ryan, who is more concerned with checking on his family and ex-fiancee. Since he has no car, Deb agrees to help him. They first visit his elderly neighbor for supplies. Finding her apparently dead, they bicker over arrangements, only to be surprised when she rises as a zombie. After they kill her, Deb drops the supplies, alerting many zombies. The two flee to her car, agreeing that they will not stop until they reach Ryan's family. Along the way, Deb eagerly rams several zombies; Ryan objects, saying they may be treatable. Although skeptical of his idealistic optimism, Deb agrees not to unnecessarily kill them. Despite their earlier agreement, Deb takes a detour to visit to Ruby, who is now a zombie. Convinced the zombies may be treatable, Deb traps Ruby in the car's trunk. At Ryan's father's mansion, the two meet Chaz, Ryan's brother, who quizzes them on whether they are zombies before allowing them in. Ryan is reunited with Stacy, and Ryan's father, Frank, reveals that his water treatment plant spread the zombie virus to the town. When Deb pushes for more information, he blames the mayor for pushing an environmentally dangerous project, to Ryan's disgust.",(1) Who owned the bishop that Tom moved?,(2) Who owned the treatment plant that spread the zombie virus?,(3) When was vaccination used to prevent the spread of the foot-and-neck virus?,(4) When was vaccination used to prevent the spread of the foot-and-mouth virus?,(5) plant reproduction requires bats to spread their what?,2,Stacy. 001_159,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Tired of killing, war veteran Jefferson Waring rides west, but in Missouri he sees ""squatters"" mowed down by men working for rich, ruthless Artemus Taylor. He spends the night at Independence newspaperman Peter Sharpe's place, but is jailed when daughter Cathy Sharpe finds this total stranger in her room. The local marshal, John Harding, is just one of many men on Taylor's payroll. Peter's business is threatened by banker Stone unless he takes Taylor's side against ""squatters"" settling in the region. The blind and wheelchair-bound Taylor and ambitious daughter Norah are secretly aware that railroad surveyors are considering laying tracks nearby, so they want all the land for themselves. Jeff decides to leave. Norah and henchman Ding Bell intercept him; Norah shoots at him but misses. They take him to see Artemus, who tells a vocally reluctant Bell to take Jeff off to a remote canyon and murder him. Under Norah's instructions, Artemus's chief thug Sam Tobin goes after them to murder both; he wounds Jeff and kills Bell, but not before Bell hits him with a fatal shot. A doctor treats Jeff's wounds but Marshall Harding turns up and charges Jeff with the two killings. When the situation escalates and two of Taylor's thugs gun down Peter Sharpe, Jeff breaks out of jail and organizes a group of settlers to resist Taylor's planned big attack. The settlers slaughter Taylor's thugs; Taylor dies of a heart attack; Norah, having shot and she thinks killed banker Justin Stone in order to get some getaway money, is killed by him as she leaves. Jeff stays in town to run the paper with Cathy.",(1) What is the first name of the person that is noticed by Sasha?,(2) What is the first name of the person that is seduced by Denise?,(3) What is the first name of the person that is intercepted by Ding Bell?,(4) What is the first name of the person that is replaced by Ray Cooper?,(5) What is the first name of the person that is hypnotized?,3,Jeff. 001_449,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," If a guy loses a girl and wants her back, he gets in touch with Tank and pays him to take the girl on a bad date. Throughout the evening Tank inevitably behaves in the most moronic fashion causing the girl to realize that her ex was not really such a bad guy after all and get back to their ex. He shares an apartment with his step cousin Dustin who has fallen for his colleague Alexis. Dustin takes Alexis on a date and confesses his love but she insists they remain friends. After the date Dustin explains his situation to Tank who volunteers his services as a good friend (instead of having to pay for his services as usual). Dustin initially turns him down, not wanting Tank to be close to Alexis, but the next day sees Alexis flirting with another co-worker and begs Tank to take Alexis out. He accepts. Tank bumps into Alexis and they arrange to go out. He behaves badly all night but Alexis is too drunk to care. When he drops her off she expects him to come in but he resists the temptation out of loyalty to Dustin. Alexis calls Dustin but when they meet she explains that her date with Tank has motivated her to see other men. Dustin sends Alexis roses and an apology poem in Tank's name. Alexis calls Tank at work and berates him for leaving early the previous night. Tank goes to see Alexis and they end up having casual sex on a regular basis while Dustin begins a series of desperate attempts to stay friends with her after all.","(1) What is the first name of the person who tries to remain friends with Alexis, despite the fact that she is sleeping with Tank?",(2) What is the full name of the person who has a father who disapproves of their friends?,(3) What is the name of the person who insists that she and Dustin remain friends?,"(4) Question: Who does Ester insists that she loves her and that she is wrong?, Answer: Anna",(5) What is the name of the person who must remain handcuffed to his father?,3,Dustin. 001_393,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Dr. Lawrence Angelo works for Virtual Space Industries, running experiments in increasing the intelligence of chimpanzees using drugs and virtual reality. One of the chimps escapes using the warfare tactics for which he was being trained. Dr. Angelo is generally a pacifist, who would rather explore the intelligence-enhancing potential of his research without applying it for military purposes. His wife Caroline is unhappy with the way he is ignoring her to focus on this project. Jobe Smith, a local greenskeeper with an intellectual disability, lives in the garden shed owned by the local priest, Father Francis McKeen. McKeen's brother, Terry, is a local landscape gardener and employs Jobe to help him with odd jobs. Father McKeen punishes the challenged Jobe with a belt and ""Hail Marys"" whenever he fails to complete his chores. Dr. Angelo realizes he needs a human subject to work with, and he spots Jobe mowing his lawn. Peter Parkette, Dr. Angelo's young neighbor, is friends with Jobe. Dr. Angelo invites both of them over to play some virtual reality games. Learning more about Jobe, Angelo persuades him to participate in his experiments, letting him know it will make him smarter. Jobe agrees and begins the program. Dr. Angelo makes it a point to redesign all the intelligence-boosting treatments without the ""aggression factors"" used in the chimpanzee experiments. Jobe soon becomes smarter, for example, learning Latin in only two hours. Meanwhile, Jobe also begins a sexual relationship with a young rich widow, Marnie. However, Jobe begins to display telepathic abilities and has hallucinations. He continues training at the lab, until an accident makes Dr. Angelo shut the program down. The project director, Sebastian Timms, employed by a mysterious agency known as The Shop, keeps tabs on the progress of the experiment, and discreetly swaps Dr. Angelo's new medications with the old Project 5 supply (reintroducing the ""aggression factors"" into the treatment).",(1) What kind of man was he?,(2) What kind of shots does the film begin with?,(3) What ability does Robert have?,(4) What kind of ability does the intellectually disabled man begin to exhibit?,(5) What kind of man does Laura marry?,4,Smith. 001_420,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Edward Dalyngrigge was a younger son and thus deprived of his father's estates through the practice of primogeniture, hence he had to make his own fortunes. By 1378, he owned the manor of Bodiam by marrying into a land-owning family. From 1379 to 1388, Dalyngrigge was a Knight of the Shire for Sussex and one of the most influential people in the county. By the time he applied to the king for a licence to crenellate (build a castle), the Hundred Years' War had been fought between England and France for nearly 50 years. Edward III of England (reigned 1327–1377) pressed his claim for the French throne and secured the territories of Aquitaine and Calais. Dalyngrigge was one of many Englishmen who travelled to France to seek their fortune as members of Free Companies – groups of mercenaries who fought for the highest bidder. He left for France in 1367 and journeyed with Lionel, Duke of Clarence and son of Edward III. After fighting under the Earl of Arundel, Dalyngrigge joined the company of Sir Robert Knolles, a notorious commander who was reputed to have made 100,000 gold crowns as a mercenary from pillage and plunder. It was as a member of the Free Companies that Dalyngrigge raised the money to build Bodiam Castle; he returned to England in 1377.The Treaty of Bruges (1375) ensured peace for two years, but after it expired, fighting resumed between England and France. In 1377 Edward III was succeeded by Richard II. During the war, England and France struggled for control of the English Channel, with raids on both coasts. With the renewed hostilities, Parliament voted that money should be spent on defending and fortifying England's south coast, and defences were erected in Kent in anticipation of a French invasion. There was internal unrest as well as external threats, and Dalyngrigge was involved in suppressing the Peasants' Revolt of 1381. The manor of Bodiam was granted a charter in 1383 permitting a weekly market and an annual fair to be held. In 1385, a fleet of 1,200 ships – variously cogs, barges, and galleys – gathered across the English Channel at Sluys, Flanders; the population of southern England was in a state of panic. Later in the year, Edward Dalyngrigge was granted a licence to fortify his manor house.",(1) What is the last name of the person who published under his own name?,(2) What is the last name of the person who wants to his daughter to have her own pony?,(3) What is the last name of the person who got attacked by his own traps?,(4) What is the last name of the person who positioned his own army between the Franks and Mongols?,(5) What is the last name of the person who had to make his own fortunes?,5,Dalyngrigge. 001_150,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," At last, the newly crowned King of Denmark, Edvard, and his wife and Queen, Dr. Paige Morgan, find time to fly to Belavia for their secret honeymoon. They spend their Christmas holidays at a ski resort, but as they take a tour of Belavia's natural beauty, Eddie and Paige discover that the evil Prime Minister Polonius has given orders to bulldoze the precious forests to drill for oil. Paige and Eddie decide they must do everything they can to save the forest, even if it means putting aside their honeymoon. Then, the couple bump into Paige's ex-boyfriend, Scott, a journalist. Eddie immediately becomes jealous. Even though Edvard suspects Scott cannot be trusted, Eddie and Paige ask him for help with the media to try and stop the minister's evil plans. Scott, however, is being controlled by the evil minister, who tells him to spy on the couple. Scott tries to back out, but fails. Eddie tries to get an audience with the prince of Belavia, but fails, so he and Paige go to the Holiday Ball. Meanwhile, Scott tries to kiss Paige and says he is sorry he let her go. Disgusted, Paige walks away and goes to find Eddie, only to find him drunk.",(1) What is the first name of the person who takes the guitar and clothes?,(2) What is the name of the person who disgusted Paige?,(3) What is the first name of the person who takes to peeping into windows?,(4) What is the first name of the person that takes refuge with Denise?,(5) What is the first name of the person who takes a tour of Belavia's natural beauty with Paige?,5,Scott. 001_181,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Talcott Williams (1849–1928), Benjamin Fox (c. 1865 – c. 1900), J. Laurie Wallace (1864–1953), Jesse Godley (1862–1889), Harry the dog (Eakins' Irish Setter, c. 1880–90), George Reynolds (c. 1839–89), and Eakins himself. The rocky promontory on which several of the men rest is the foundation of the Mill Creek mill, which was razed in 1873. It is the only sign of civilization in the work—no shoes, clothes, or bath houses are visible. The foliage in the background provides a dark background against which the swimmers' skin tones contrast. The positioning of the bodies and their musculature refers to classical ideals of physical beauty and masculine camaraderie evocative of Greek art. The reclining figure is a paraphrase of the Dying Gaul, and is juxtaposed with the far less formal self-depiction by the artist. It is possible that Eakins was seeking to reconcile an ancient theme with a modern interpretation; the subject was contemporary, but the poses of some of the figures recall those of classical sculpture. One possible influence by a contemporary source was Scène d'été, painted in 1869 by Frédéric Bazille (1841–70). It is not unlikely that Eakins saw the painting at the Salon while studying in Paris, and would have been sympathetic to its depiction of male bathers in a modern setting.In Eakins' oeuvre, The Swimming Hole was immediately preceded by a number of similar works on the Arcadian theme. These correspond to lectures he gave on Ancient Greek sculpture and were inspired by the Pennsylvania Academy's casts of Phidias' Pan-Athenaic procession from the Parthenon marbles. A series of photographs, relief sculptures, and oil sketches culminated in the 1883 Arcadia, a painting that also featured nude figures—posed for by a student, a nephew, and the artist's fiancée—in a pastoral landscape.",(1) Who painted The Old Guitarist during his blue period?,(2) What was the name of the person that painted The Old Swimming Hole?,(3) What is the name of the person that painted Las Meninas?,(4) What was the first name of the person who titled the painting The Old Swimming Hole?,(5) What was the name that Susan Macdowell Eakins changed the name of the painting before it was titled The Old Swimming Hole?,2,Swimming. 001_426,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," It is implied that, in the future, all plant life on Earth has become extinct. As many specimens as possible have been preserved in a series of enormous, greenhouse-like geodesic domes, attached to a large spaceship named ""Valley Forge"", forming part of a fleet of American Airlines space freighters, currently just outside the orbit of Saturn. Freeman Lowell, one of four crewmen aboard, is the resident botanist and ecologist who carefully preserves a variety of plants for their eventual return to Earth and the reforestation of the planet. Lowell spends most of his time in the domes, both cultivating the crops and attending to the animal life. The crew receives orders to jettison and destroy the domes (with nuclear charges) and return the freighters to commercial service. After four of the six domes are jettisoned and blown up Lowell rebels and opts instead to save the plants and animals on his ship. Lowell kills one of his crew-mates who arrives to plant explosives in his favorite dome, and his right leg is seriously injured in the process. He then jettisons and triggers the destruction of one of the remaining domes, trapping and killing the remaining two crewmen. Enlisting the aid of the ship's three ""drones"" (service robots), Huey, Dewey and Louie (named after Donald Duck's nephews), Lowell stages a fake premature explosion as a ruse and sends the Valley Forge careening towards Saturn in an attempt to hijack the ship and flee with the last forest dome. He then reprograms the drones to perform surgery on his leg and sets the Valley Forge on a risky course through Saturn's rings. Later, as the ship endures the rough passage, Drone 3 (Louie) is lost, but the ship and its remaining dome emerge relatively undamaged on the other side of the rings. Lowell and the surviving drones, Huey and Dewey, set out into deep space to maintain the forest. Lowell reprograms Huey and Dewey to plant trees and play poker. Lowell begins speaking to them constantly, as if they are children.",(1) What are the names of the two officers that John overpowers?,(2) What are the names of the two drones that are not lost?,(3) What are the first names of the two that are reconciled?,(4) What are the names of the two hitman?,(5) What are the names of the two films that feature whales?,2,Huey. 001_353,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," When Boston Blackie performs magic tricks at a Thanksgiving Day party for the inmates of a women's prison, Dinah Moran volunteers to enter a booth. She disappears after he draws the curtain, but as a former magician's assistant, uses the opportunity to escape. Police Inspector Farraday takes Blackie into custody as an accomplice, but Blackie easily gets away himself. A trip to the library reveals that Dinah was sent to prison for three years for a robbery that netted $100,000 (which was never recovered) and a dead victim. Her magician former husband, John Lampau, was acquitted. Blackie tracks Lampau down, still performing magic, but now under the name of Jani, to warn him. Dinah shows up minutes later, having heard that Jani intends to marry his new assistant, Irene. Dinah has come to make sure she gets her half of the loot. In a scuffle, she grazes Jani's right hand with a gunshot before fleeing. Blackie arranges to impersonate Jani, while the magician hides in Blackie's absent friend's apartment. That night, Blackie is awoken by sounds in Jani's apartment. When he investigates, a woman runs out of the unlit room. Blackie eventually locates the money in Jani's safety deposit box and takes it, still disguised as Jani. Outside, Dinah forces him at gunpoint to give her the envelope containing the loot, but when she opens it, it is empty. Blackie had taken the precaution of pocketing the money. In the meantime, Blackie's friend returns home from a trip early and finds Jani's body in the closet. Farraday corners and arrests Blackie and his sidekick, ""the Runt"" (George E. Stone), for murder. Blackie easily escapes from his cell.",(1) What is the full name of the person whose mother the police shoot?,(2) What is the full name of the person that the police drove home?,(3) What is the full name of the person whom police suspect aided Dinah in her escape?,(4) What is the full name of the person whom Eccles was presented to?,(5) What's the full name of the person whose boyfriend bails Dinah and the loafers out of jail?,3,John Lampau. 001_151,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," At last, the newly crowned King of Denmark, Edvard, and his wife and Queen, Dr. Paige Morgan, find time to fly to Belavia for their secret honeymoon. They spend their Christmas holidays at a ski resort, but as they take a tour of Belavia's natural beauty, Eddie and Paige discover that the evil Prime Minister Polonius has given orders to bulldoze the precious forests to drill for oil. Paige and Eddie decide they must do everything they can to save the forest, even if it means putting aside their honeymoon. Then, the couple bump into Paige's ex-boyfriend, Scott, a journalist. Eddie immediately becomes jealous. Even though Edvard suspects Scott cannot be trusted, Eddie and Paige ask him for help with the media to try and stop the minister's evil plans. Scott, however, is being controlled by the evil minister, who tells him to spy on the couple. Scott tries to back out, but fails. Eddie tries to get an audience with the prince of Belavia, but fails, so he and Paige go to the Holiday Ball. Meanwhile, Scott tries to kiss Paige and says he is sorry he let her go. Disgusted, Paige walks away and goes to find Eddie, only to find him drunk.",(1) What is the first name of the person that takes refuge with Denise?,(2) What is the first name of the person who takes to peeping into windows?,(3) What is the first name of the person who takes a tour of Belavia's natural beauty with Paige?,(4) What is the name of the person who disgusted Paige?,(5) What is the first name of the person who takes the guitar and clothes?,3,Polonius. 001_486,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Before the 1760s, Westgate consisted of only a farm, a coastguard station (built 1791 and still standing in Old Boundary Road) and a few cottages for the crew that surrounded it. These were located beside the coast at St Mildred's Bay, named after Mildrith, Thanet's patron saint and a one-time Abbess of Minster. The town inherited its name from the Westgate Manor, which was located in the area in medieval times. In the early 20th century, the remains of a Roman villa were discovered in what is now Beach Road, where a stream once used to flow. Fresh water can still be seen rising from the sand at low tide. During the late 1860s, businessmen developed the area into a seaside resort for the upper to middle-classes. A stretch of sea wall, with promenade on top, was constructed around the beaches at St Mildred's Bay and West Bay, and the land divided into plots to be sold for what would become an exclusive development by the sea for wealthy metropolitan families within a gated community, rather than for occasional tourists. The opening of a railway station, in 1871, led to the rapid expansion of the population, which reached 2,738 by 1901. The demands of the increasing population led to the building of the parish churches of St. James in 1872 and St. Saviour in 1884. St. Saviour's was designed by the architect C.N. Beazley. In 1884 it was reported that Essex, on the other side of the Thames Estuary, was hit by a tremor so large that it caused the bells of St. James' Church to ring. In 1884, ownership of most of the resort passed to Coutts Bank, after the previous proprietors had gone bankrupt.Around twenty schools were opened during the late 19th century, although many had only a few pupils or closed within a few years. The largest of the schools were Streete Court School, Wellington House Preparatory School and St Michael's School.Wellington House was established in 1886 by two clergymen, the Bull brothers. It closed in 1970 and was demolished in 1972. Notable old boys included Doctor Who actor Jon Pertwee and cabinet minister John Profumo, known for his involvement in the Profumo affair. Streete Court School was opened in 1894 by John Vine Milne, the father of the author A. A. Milne. In the 1890s, the school was attended by St John Philby, the father of the spy Kim Philby.The Coronation Bandstand was built by the cliff edge in 1903, at a cost of £350, to celebrate the coronation of King Edward VII. The following year, a group of French Ursuline nuns, who were banned from teaching in France, fled with some of their pupils to Westgate-on-Sea and established the Ursuline Convent School, which in 1995 was re-established as Ursuline College. In 1910, a Swiss-Gothic styled town hall was built. However, it was soon decided that the building could be put to better use, and in 1912, it was transformed into the Town Hall Cinema. In 1932, it was renamed the Carlton Cinema.","(1) What is the name of the current building that was constructed in 1863, although the original purpose is obscure?",(2) Who was appointed president in 1912?,(3) What is the current name of the building that was transformed in 1912?,(4) What is the current name of the plant species that was named after Sole?,(5) What is the first name of the person whose ship was trapped in March of 1912?,3,Swiss-Gothic styled town hall. 001_242,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," After immigrant Mireya Sanchez is deported, ICE / Homeland Security Investigations Special Agent Max Brogan takes care of her little son and brings him to the boy's grandparents in Mexico. Later the woman is found dead near the border. Brogan returns to the grandparents to tell them the bad news. Taslima Jahangir, a 15-year-old girl from Bangladesh, presents a paper at school promoting that people should try to understand the 9/11 hijackers. The school principal reports this to authorities. FBI agents raid the home and ransack the girl's room, reading her diaries and a school assignment on the ethics of suicide; they criticize her room as ""too austere"" and note that she has an account on an Islamic website. The profiler says this makes her look like a would-be suicide bomber. Taslima is not charged for this, but it turns out that she stays in the United States illegally. She was born in Bangladesh and brought to the United States at age three. Taslima's continued presence jeopardizes her chances and puts at risk her two younger siblings, who are US citizens because they were born in the country. Denise Frankel, the immigration defense attorney, suggests that instead of the whole family's being deported, Taslima can leave for Bangladesh with her mother while the rest of the family stays in the U.S.",(1) What country is found on Bulgaria's northern border?,(2) Who is found dead in the morning?,(3) Who is found dead near the border?,(4) Which private university is located near the Edmond border?,(5) Who is found dead in Coffin Rock?,3,Taslima. 001_120,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Kannada became more prominent as a literary language during the Rashtrakuta rule with its script and literature showing remarkable growth, dignity and productivity. This period effectively marked the end of the classical Prakrit and Sanskrit era. Court poets and royalty created eminent works in Kannada and Sanskrit that spanned such literary forms as prose, poetry, rhetoric, the Hindu epics and the life history of Jain tirthankars. Bilingual writers such as Asaga gained fame, and noted scholars such as the Mahaviracharya wrote on pure mathematics in the court of King Amoghavarsha I.Kavirajamarga (850) by King Amoghavarsha I is the earliest available book on rhetoric and poetics in Kannada, though it is evident from this book that native styles of Kannada composition had already existed in previous centuries. Kavirajamarga is a guide to poets (Kavishiksha) that aims to standardize these various styles. The book refers to early Kannada prose and poetry writers such as Durvinita, perhaps the 6th-century monarch of Western Ganga Dynasty.The Jain writer Adikavi Pampa, widely regarded as one of the most influential Kannada writers, became famous for Adipurana (941). Written in champu (mixed prose-verse style) style, it is the life history of the first Jain tirthankara Rishabhadeva. Pampa's other notable work was Vikramarjuna Vijaya (941), the author's version of the Hindu epic, Mahabharata, with Arjuna as the hero. Also called Pampa Bharata, it is a eulogy of the writer's patron, King Chalukya Arikeseri of Vemulawada (a Rashtrakuta feudatory), comparing the king's virtues favorably to those of Arjuna. Pampa demonstrates such a command of classical Kannada that scholars over the centuries have written many interpretations of his work.Another notable Jain writer in Kannada was Sri Ponna, patronised by King Krishna III and famed for Shantipurana, his account of the life of Shantinatha, the 16th Jain tirthankara. He earned the title Ubhaya Kavichakravathi (supreme poet in two languages) for his command over both Kannada and Sanskrit. His other writings in Kannada were Bhuvanaika-ramaabhyudaya, Jinaksharamale and Gatapratyagata. Adikavi Pampa and Sri Ponna are called ""gems of Kannada literature"".",(1) What is the first name of the person that switched from the history course to English after his first year?,(2) What is the name of the poem that is the life history of the first Jain tirthankara Rishabhadeva?,(3) What was the name of the poem that memorialized the Light Brigade?,(4) What is the name of the story that is loosely based on Torquato Tasso's epic poem Gerusalemme liberata?,(5) What is the first period of the three that Western history is traditionally divided into?,2,Adipurana. 001_252,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Μακεδονία, Makedonía), also called Macedon (), was an ancient kingdom on the periphery of Archaic and Classical Greece, and later the dominant state of Hellenistic Greece. The kingdom was founded and initially ruled by the royal Argead dynasty, which was followed by the Antipatrid and Antigonid dynasties. Home to the ancient Macedonians, the earliest kingdom was centered on the northeastern part of the Greek peninsula, and bordered by Epirus to the west, Paeonia to the north, Thrace to the east and Thessaly to the south. Before the 4th century BC, Macedonia was a small kingdom outside of the area dominated by the great city-states of Athens, Sparta and Thebes, and briefly subordinate to Achaemenid Persia. During the reign of the Argead king Philip II (359–336 BC), Macedonia subdued mainland Greece and Thrace through conquest and diplomacy. With a reformed army containing phalanxes wielding the sarissa pike, Philip II defeated the old powers of Athens and Thebes in the Battle of Chaeronea in 338 BC. Philip II's son Alexander the Great, leading a federation of Greek states, accomplished his father's objective of commanding the whole of Greece when he destroyed Thebes after the city revolted. During Alexander's subsequent campaign of conquest, he overthrew the Achaemenid Empire and conquered territory that stretched as far as the Indus River. For a brief period, his empire was the most powerful in the world – the definitive Hellenistic state, inaugurating the transition to a new period of Ancient Greek civilization. Greek arts and literature flourished in the new conquered lands and advances in philosophy, engineering, and science spread throughout much of the ancient world. Of particular importance were the contributions of Aristotle, tutor to Alexander, whose writings became a keystone of Western philosophy. After Alexander's death in 323 BC, the ensuing wars of the Diadochi, and the partitioning of Alexander's short-lived empire, Macedonia remained a Greek cultural and political center in the Mediterranean region along with Ptolemaic Egypt, the Seleucid Empire, and the Kingdom of Pergamon. Important cities such as Pella, Pydna, and Amphipolis were involved in power struggles for control of the territory. New cities were founded, such as Thessalonica by the usurper Cassander (named after his wife Thessalonike of Macedon). Macedonia's decline began with the Macedonian Wars and the rise of Rome as the leading Mediterranean power. At the end of the Third Macedonian War in 168 BC, the Macedonian monarchy was abolished and replaced by Roman client states. A short-lived revival of the monarchy during the Fourth Macedonian War in 150–148 BC ended with the establishment of the Roman province of Macedonia.",(1) What is the full name of the person that had the most powerful empire in the world?,(2) What is the full name of the person that had interest in Hindu philosophy?,(3) Who is the de facto most powerful person in Europe?,(4) What is the full name of the person that had practised in Greece and Palestine?,(5) What is the full name of the person that had their drawings reproduced?,1,Alexander the Great. 001_347,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," The rulers of the princely states were not uniformly enthusiastic about integrating their domains into independent India. Some, such as the rulers of Bikaner and Jawhar, were motivated to join India out of ideological and patriotic considerations, but others insisted that they had the right to join either India or Pakistan, to remain independent, or form a union of their own. Bhopal, Travancore and Hyderabad announced that they did not intend to join either dominion. Hyderabad went as far as to appoint trade representatives in European countries and commencing negotiations with the Portuguese to lease or buy Goa to give it access to the sea, and Travancore pointed to the strategic importance to western countries of its thorium reserves while asking for recognition. Some states proposed a subcontinent-wide confederation of princely states, as a third entity in addition to India and Pakistan. Bhopal attempted to build an alliance between the princely states and the Muslim League to counter the pressure being put on rulers by the Congress.A number of factors contributed to the collapse of this initial resistance and to nearly all non-Muslim majority princely states agreeing to accede to India. An important factor was the lack of unity among the princes. The smaller states did not trust the larger states to protect their interests, and many Hindu rulers did not trust Muslim princes, in particular Hamidullah Khan, the Nawab of Bhopal and a leading proponent of independence, whom they viewed as an agent for Pakistan. Others, believing integration to be inevitable, sought to build bridges with the Congress, hoping thereby to gain a say in shaping the final settlement. The resultant inability to present a united front or agree on a common position significantly reduced their bargaining power in negotiations with the Congress. The decision by the Muslim League to stay out of the Constituent Assembly was also fatal to the princes' plan to build an alliance with it to counter the Congress, and attempts to boycott the Constituent Assembly altogether failed on 28 April 1947, when the states of Baroda, Bikaner, Cochin, Gwalior, Jaipur, Jodhpur, Patiala and Rewa took their seats in the Assembly.Many princes were also pressured by popular sentiment favouring integration with India, which meant their plans for independence had little support from their subjects. The Maharaja of Travancore, for example, definitively abandoned his plans for independence after the attempted assassination of his dewan, Sir C. P. Ramaswami Iyer. In a few states, the chief ministers or dewans played a significant role in convincing the princes to accede to India. The key factors that led the states to accept integration into India were, however, the efforts of Lord Mountbatten, Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel and V. P. Menon. The latter two were respectively the political and administrative heads of the States Department, which was in charge of relations with the princely states.",(1) What are the last names of the two individuals who reportedly did not get along well and had grown apart artistically?,(2) What are the last names of the two individuals who were to maintain a correspondence over thirty years?,"(3) What are the last names of the two individuals who were respectively the political and administrative heads of the States Department, which was in charge of relations with the princely states?",(4) What are the names of 2 individuals who were unleashing a reign of terror?,(5) What is the principle of normalization of relations with Arab states?,3,Patel. 001_479,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Stereolab's music is politically and philosophically charged. Dave Heaton of PopMatters said that the group ""[uses] lyrics to convey ideas while using them for the pleasurable way the words sound."" The lyrics of the 2006 compilation Fab Four Suture, contains themes of war, governments that suppress freedom, and ""the powerlessness that everyday people feel in the face of it all"", in contrast to ""humans [working] together, [treating] each other like people, and [pushing] for governments that would do the same."" Lætitia Sadier, who writes the group's lyrics, was influenced by both the Situationist philosophy Society of the Spectacle by Marxist theorist Guy Debord, and her anger towards the Iraq War. The Surrealist, as well as the Situationist cultural and political movements were also influences, as stated by Sadier and Gane in a 1999 Salon interview.Critics have seen Marxist allusions in the band's lyrics, and have gone so far as to call the band members themselves Marxist. Music journalist Simon Reynolds commented that Sadier's lyrics tend to lean towards Marxist social commentary rather than ""affairs of the heart"". The 1994 single ""Ping Pong"" has been put forward as evidence in regard to these alleged views. In the song, Sadier sings ""about capitalism's cruel cycles of slump and recovery"" with lyrics that constitute ""a plainspoken explanation of one of the central tenets of Marxian economic analysis"" (said critics Reynolds and Stewart Mason, respectively).Band members have resisted attempts to link the group and its music to Marxism. In a 1999 interview, Gane stated that ""none of us are Marxists ... I've never even read Marx."" Gane said that although Sadier's lyrics touch on political topics, they do not cross the line into ""sloganeering"". Sadier also said that she had read very little Marx. In contrast, Cornelius Castoriadis, a radical political philosopher but strong critic of Marxism, has been cited as a marking influence in Sadier's thinking. The name of her side project, Monade, and its debut album title, Socialisme ou Barbarie, are also references to the work of Castoriadis.Stereolab's album and song titles occasionally reference avant-garde political groups and artists. Gane said that the title of their 1999 album Cobra and Phases Group Play Voltage in the Milky Night contains the names of two Surrealist organisations, ""CoBrA"" and ""Phases Group"", The title of the song ""Brakhage"" from Dots and Loops (1997), is a nod to experimental filmmaker Stan Brakhage. Other examples are the 1992 compilation Switched On, named after Wendy Carlos' 1968 album Switched On Bach, and the 1993 song ""Jenny Ondioline"", an interlock of inventor Georges Jenny and his instrument the Ondioline.",(1) What challenges are Japan using Whitehead's ideas to help manage?,"(2) What is the name of the group that ""[uses] lyrics to convey ideas while using them for the pleasurable way the words sound""?",(3) Socrates believes that the best possible way to speak is using names that what?,(4) What is a way of improperly using antibiotics for those traveling?,"(5) What is the name of the album for which there were no vocals or lyrics prepared, so the band wrote them while in the studio?",2,Stereolab. 001_344,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," the Pōhakuloa (180–130 ka), Wāihu (80–60 ka) and Mākanaka (40–13 ka) series. These have extensively sculpted the summit, depositing moraines and a circular ring of till and gravel along the volcano's upper flanks. Subglacial eruptions built cinder cones during the Mākanaka glaciation, most of which were heavily gouged by glacial action. The most recent cones were built between 9000 and 4500 years ago, atop the glacial deposits, although one study indicates that the last eruption may have been around 3600 years ago.At their maximum extent, the glaciers extended from the summit down to between 3,200 and 3,800 m (10,500 and 12,500 ft) of elevation. A small body of permafrost, less than 25 m (80 ft) across, was found at the summit of Mauna Kea before 1974, and may still be present. Small gullies etch the summit, formed by rain- and snow-fed streams that flow only during winter melt and rain showers.",(1) What was later discovered written by Luther?,(2) What group was covered by private insurance in 2000?,(3) What was likely covered by later lava flows on Mauna Loa?,(4) Why Dylan song was covered by Billy Joel?,(5) What did the United States Exploring Expedition name the second camp on the way up to the summit of Mauna Loa?,3,Mauna Kea. 001_356,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," The experience was rewarding for Pei, and he agreed immediately to work with the group again. The new project was the Miho Museum, to display Koyama's collection of tea ceremony artifacts. Pei visited the site in Shiga Prefecture, and during their conversations convinced Koyama to expand her collection. She conducted a global search and acquired more than 300 items showcasing the history of the Silk Road.One major challenge was the approach to the museum. The Japanese team proposed a winding road up the mountain, not unlike the approach to the NCAR building in Colorado. Instead, Pei ordered a hole cut through a nearby mountain, connected to a major road via a bridge suspended from ninety-six steel cables and supported by a post set into the mountain. The museum itself was built into the mountain, with 80 percent of the building underground.When designing the exterior, Pei borrowed from the tradition of Japanese temples, particularly those found in nearby Kyoto. He created a concise spaceframe wrapped into French limestone and covered with a glass roof. Pei also oversaw specific decorative details, including a bench in the entrance lobby, carved from a 350-year-old keyaki tree. Because of Koyama's considerable wealth, money was rarely considered an obstacle; estimates at the time of completion put the cost of the project at US$350 million.During the first decade of the 2000s, Pei designed a variety of buildings, including the Suzhou Museum near his childhood home. He also designed the Museum of Islamic Art in Doha, Qatar at the request of the Al-Thani Family. Although it was originally planned for the corniche road along Doha Bay, Pei convinced project coordinators to build a new island to provide the needed space. He then spent six months touring the region and surveying mosques in Spain, Syria, and Tunisia. He was especially impressed with the elegant simplicity of the Mosque of Ibn Tulun in Cairo. Once again, Pei sought to combine new design elements with the classical aesthetic most appropriate for the location of the building. The rectangular boxes rotate evenly to create a subtle movement, with small arched windows at regular intervals into the limestone exterior. The museum's coordinators were pleased with the project; its official website describes its ""true splendour unveiled in the sunlight"", and speaks of ""the shades of colour and the interplay of shadows paying tribute to the essence of Islamic architecture"". The Macao Science Center in Macau was designed by Pei Partnership Architects in association with I. M. Pei. The project to build the science center was conceived in 2001 and construction started in 2006. The center was completed in 2009 and opened by the Chinese President Hu Jintao.",(1) What is the name of the person that conducted a global search and acquired more than 300 items showcasing the history of the Silk Road?,"(2) What is the name of the person that acquired the nickname of ""Il Diavolo""?",(3) What is the name of the person that conducted the Viola Concerto?,(4) What is the name of the person that conducted Le sacre du printemps?,(5) What is the name of the person who conducted a global search and acquired more than 300 items?,1,Koyama. 001_224,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," a clumsy plagiarism of the Russian School"" and called Ravel a ""mediocrely gifted debutant ... who will perhaps become something if not someone in about ten years, if he works hard."" Another critic, Pierre Lalo, thought that Ravel showed talent, but was too indebted to Debussy and should instead emulate Beethoven. Over the succeeding decades Lalo became Ravel's most implacable critic.From the start of his career, Ravel appeared calmly indifferent to blame or praise. Those who knew him well believed that this was no pose but wholly genuine. The only opinion of his music that he truly valued was his own, perfectionist and severely self-critical. At twenty years of age he was, in the words of the biographer Burnett James, ""self-possessed, a little aloof, intellectually biased, given to mild banter."" He dressed like a dandy and was meticulous about his appearance and demeanour. Orenstein comments that, short in stature, light in frame, and bony in features, Ravel had the ""appearance of a well-dressed jockey"", whose large head seemed suitably matched to his formidable intellect. During the late 1890s and into the early years of the next century, Ravel was bearded in the fashion of the day; from his mid-thirties he was clean-shaven.",(1) What are the last names of the two people who Palmer said were obvious influences to Curtis?,(2) What are the names of Ravel's two teachers who were key influences on his development as a composer?,(3) What are the names of the two people who played a joke on Nigel?,(4) Whose teachers were key influences on their development as a composer?,(5) What are the first names of the two people who were dismissed as the Beatles' lawyers?,2,Ravel. 001_227,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," a clumsy plagiarism of the Russian School"" and called Ravel a ""mediocrely gifted debutant ... who will perhaps become something if not someone in about ten years, if he works hard."" Another critic, Pierre Lalo, thought that Ravel showed talent, but was too indebted to Debussy and should instead emulate Beethoven. Over the succeeding decades Lalo became Ravel's most implacable critic.From the start of his career, Ravel appeared calmly indifferent to blame or praise. Those who knew him well believed that this was no pose but wholly genuine. The only opinion of his music that he truly valued was his own, perfectionist and severely self-critical. At twenty years of age he was, in the words of the biographer Burnett James, ""self-possessed, a little aloof, intellectually biased, given to mild banter."" He dressed like a dandy and was meticulous about his appearance and demeanour. Orenstein comments that, short in stature, light in frame, and bony in features, Ravel had the ""appearance of a well-dressed jockey"", whose large head seemed suitably matched to his formidable intellect. During the late 1890s and into the early years of the next century, Ravel was bearded in the fashion of the day; from his mid-thirties he was clean-shaven.",(1) What are the names of the two people who played a joke on Nigel?,(2) Whose teachers were key influences on their development as a composer?,(3) What are the last names of the two people who Palmer said were obvious influences to Curtis?,(4) What are the first names of the two people who were dismissed as the Beatles' lawyers?,(5) What are the names of Ravel's two teachers who were key influences on his development as a composer?,5,Ravel. 001_270,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," A Late Preclassic tomb has been excavated, believed to be a royal burial. This tomb has been designated Burial 1; it was found during excavations of Structure 7A and was inserted into the centre of this Middle Preclassic structure. The burial is also associated with Stela 13 and with a massive offering of more than 600 ceramic vessels and other artifacts found at the base of Structure 7A. These ceramics date the offering to the end of the Late Preclassic. No human remains have been recovered but the find is assumed to be a burial due to the associated artifacts. The body is believed to have been interred upon a litter measuring 1 by 2 metres (3.3 by 6.6 ft), which was probably made of wood and coated in red cinnabar dust. Grave goods include an 18-piece jade necklace, two earspools coated in cinnabar, various mosaic mirrors made from iron pyrite, one consisting of more than 800 pieces, a jade mosaic mask, two prismatic obsidian blades, a finely carved greenstone fish, various beads that presumably formed jewellery such as bracelets and a selection of ceramics that date the tomb to AD 100–200.In October 2012, a tomb carbon-dated between 700 BC and 400 BC was reported to have been found in Takalik Abaj of a ruler nicknamed K'utz Chman (""Grandfather Vulture"" in Mam) by archaeologists, a sacred king or ""big chief"" who ""bridged the gap between the Olmec and Mayan cultures in Central America,"" according to Miguel Orrego. The tomb is suggested to be the oldest Maya royal burial to have been discovered so far.",(1) What party is associated with blue?,(2) What is the only metalloid in group 13?,(3) What date is associated with Satanikhil massacre?,(4) Who is Number 13?,(5) What is associated with Stela 13?,5,litter. 001_327,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," I decided then and there that the symphonies of Beethoven and Brahms were the only music for me, not the music of this crazy Russian. ... My one desire was to flee that room and find a quiet corner in which to rest my aching head. Then [Diaghilev] turned to me and with a smile said, ""This is a masterpiece, Monteux, which will completely revolutionize music and make you famous, because you are going to conduct it."" And, of course, I did. Despite his initial reaction, Monteux worked with Stravinsky, giving practical advice to help the composer to achieve the orchestral balance and effects he sought. Together they worked on the score from March to May 1913, and to get the orchestra of the Théâtre des Champs-Élysées to cope with the unfamiliar and difficult music Monteux held seventeen rehearsals, an unusually large number. Monteux's real attitude to the score is unclear. In his old age he told a biographer, ""I did not like Le Sacre then. I have conducted it fifty times since. I do not like it now."" However, he told his wife in 1963 that the Rite was ""now fifty years old, and I do not think it has aged at all. I had pleasure in conducting the fiftieth anniversary of Le Sacre this spring"".",(1) What is the first name of the person that is referred to as American Girl Reporter?,(2) What is the full name of the person Monteux was married to prior to 1928?,(3) What is the name of the person Monteux referred to as a crazy Russian?,"(4) name a person or character who is referred to as ""lady.""","(5) What is the name of the person that was referred to as an ""English"" photographerreferred to as an ""English"" photographer?",3,Stravinsky. 001_364,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," In September 1921, Beiderbecke enrolled at the Lake Forest Academy, a boarding school north of Chicago in Lake Forest, Illinois. While historians have traditionally suggested that his parents sent him to Lake Forest to discourage his interest in jazz, others believe that he may have been sent away in response to his arrest. Regardless, Mr. and Mrs. Beiderbecke apparently felt that a boarding school would provide their son with both the faculty attention and discipline required to improve his academic performance, necessitated by the fact that Bix had failed most courses at High School, remaining a junior in 1921 despite turning 18 in March of that year. His interests, however, remained limited to music and sports. In pursuit of the former, Beiderbecke often visited Chicago to listen to jazz bands at night clubs and speakeasies, including the infamous Friar's Inn, where he sometimes sat in with the New Orleans Rhythm Kings. He also traveled to the predominantly African-American South Side to listen to classic black jazz bands such as King Oliver's Creole Jazz Band, which featured Louis Armstrong on second cornet. ""Don't think I'm getting hard, Burnie,"" he wrote to his brother, ""but I'd go to hell to hear a good band."" On campus, he helped organize the Cy-Bix Orchestra with drummer Walter ""Cy"" Welge and almost immediately got into trouble with the Lake Forest headmaster for performing indecorously at a school dance. Beiderbecke often failed to return to his dormitory before curfew, and sometimes stayed off-campus the next day. In the early morning hours of May 20, 1922, he was caught on the fire escape to his dormitory, attempting to climb back into his room. The faculty voted to expel him the next day, due both to his academic failings and his extracurricular activities, which included drinking. The headmaster informed Beiderbecke's parents by letter that following his expulsion school officials confirmed that Beiderbecke ""was drinking himself and was responsible, in part at least, in having liquor brought into the School."" Soon after, Beiderbecke began pursuing a career in music.He returned to Davenport briefly in the summer of 1922, then moved to Chicago to join the Cascades Band, working that summer on Lake Michigan excursion boats. He gigged around Chicago until the fall of 1923, at times returning to Davenport to work for his father.",(1) What is the first name of the person whose mother tries to discourage her?,(2) What is the first name of the person whose parents sent him to Lake Forest to discourage his interest in jazz?,(3) What is the full name of the person whose parents died?,(4) What is the full name of the person who sent a pilot to scout Lake Izabal?,(5) What is the first name of the person whose parents and friends welcome him into the world?,2,Beiderbecke. 001_129,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," A number of factors led to the popularity of Netherlandish illuminators. Primary was the tradition and expertise that developed in the region in the centuries following the monastic reform of the 14th century, building on the growth in number and prominence of monasteries, abbeys and churches from the 12th century that had already produced significant numbers of liturgical texts. There was a strong political aspect; the form had many influential patrons such as Jean, Duke of Berry and Philip the Good, the latter of whom collected more than a thousand illuminated books before his death. According to Thomas Kren, Philip's ""library was an expression of the man as a Christian prince, and an embodiment of the state – his politics and authority, his learning and piety"". Because of his patronage the manuscript industry in the Lowlands grew so that it dominated Europe for several generations. The Burgundian book-collecting tradition passed to Philip's son and his wife, Charles the Bold and Margaret of York; his granddaughter Mary of Burgundy and her husband Maximilian I; and to his son-in-law, Edward IV, who was an avid collector of Flemish manuscripts. The libraries left by Philip and Edward IV formed the nucleus from which sprang the Royal Library of Belgium and the English Royal Library.Netherlandish illuminators had an important export market, designing many works specifically for the English market. Following a decline in domestic patronage after Charles the Bold died in 1477, the export market became more important. Illuminators responded to differences in taste by producing more lavish and extravagantly decorated works tailored for foreign elites, including Edward IV of England, James IV of Scotland and Eleanor of Viseu.",(1) What is the full name of the person whose library was an expression of the man as a Christian prince?,(2) What is the full name of the person whose family was killed?,(3) What is the full name of the person whose father was murdered?,(4) What is the full name of the person whose husband worked as a novelist?,(5) What is the full name of the person whose father was arrested?,1,Margaret of York. 001_215,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," In Billings, Montana, a police officer arrives and discovers Woody Grant walking on the shoulder of the roadway. Woody is picked up by his son David, who learns that Woody wants to go to Lincoln, Nebraska, to collect a million dollar sweepstakes prize he believes he has won. When David sees the sweepstakes letter, he knows immediately that it is a mail scam designed to get gullible people to purchase magazine subscriptions. David brings his father home, where his mother Kate becomes increasingly annoyed by Woody's insistence on collecting the money. After Woody is picked up again trying to get to Nebraska, David and his brother Ross discuss putting Woody in a retirement home. David pays a visit with his ex-girlfriend, Noel, who returns his belongings and refuses to move back in with him. Their conversation is cut short by a call from Kate reporting that Woody has taken off once again. David retrieves Woody and decides to drive him all the way to Lincoln, much to Kate's dismay. While in Rapid City, South Dakota, Woody goes on a bender and hits his head while stumbling back to their motel room. David takes him to the hospital to get his head stitched up. David learns that they will be passing through Woody's hometown of Hawthorne, Nebraska, and suggests they spend the night with Woody's family. Woody is against the idea, but they end up going anyway. They stay with Woody's brother Ray, his wife, and their two sons, Cole and Bart. Woody and David visit a mechanic shop Woody once co-owned, followed by some beers at a bar. When David brings up Woody's alcoholism and problems within the family—with Woody implying that he did not love Kate nor really want children—they get into an argument. At another bar, they meet Ed Pegram, whom the family blames for stealing Woody's air compressor decades ago. Over David's objections, Woody mentions winning the money and the barflies toast his good fortune. The next day, they learn that the news has spread through the town like wildfire.",(1) In what town did Bill Aiken grow up?,"(2) Question: In what year did Ed Wood struggle to join the film industry?, Answer: In 1952",(3) In what town is Southampton Airport located?,(4) In what town did Woody Grant run into Ed Pegram?,(5) In what town does Rudy Sr. live?,4,Woody Grant. 001_14,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Philip Arnold Heseltine (30 October 1894 – 17 December 1930), known by the pseudonym Peter Warlock, was a British composer and music critic. The Warlock name, which reflects Heseltine's interest in occult practices, was used for all his published musical works. He is best known as a composer of songs and other vocal music; he also achieved notoriety in his lifetime through his unconventional and often scandalous lifestyle. As a schoolboy at Eton College, Heseltine met the British composer Frederick Delius, with whom he formed a close friendship. After a failed student career in Oxford and London, Heseltine turned to musical journalism, while developing interests in folk-song and Elizabethan music. His first serious compositions date from around 1915. Following a period of inactivity, a positive and lasting influence on his work arose from his meeting in 1916 with the Dutch composer Bernard van Dieren; he also gained creative impetus from a year spent in Ireland, studying Celtic culture and language. On his return to England in 1918, Heseltine began composing songs in a distinctive, original style, while building a reputation as a combative and controversial music critic. During 1920–21 he edited the music magazine The Sackbut. His most prolific period as a composer came in the 1920s, when he was based first in Wales and later at Eynsford in Kent. Through his critical writings, published under his own name, Heseltine made a pioneering contribution to the scholarship of early music. In addition, he produced a full-length biography of Frederick Delius and wrote, edited, or otherwise assisted the production of several other books and pamphlets. Towards the end of his life, Heseltine became depressed by a loss of his creative inspiration. He died in his London flat of coal gas poisoning in 1930, probably by his own hand.",(1) What is the last name of the person who was employed as a court composer at Brunswick in 1694?,(2) What is the last name of the person who recorded several albums of original music?,(3) What is the last name of the person who took vocal lessons with J.E. Hutchinson?,(4) What is the last name of the person who is best known for his mid-period allegorical landscapes?,(5) What is the last name of the person who is best known as a composer of songs and other vocal music?,5,Philip Arnold Heseltine. 001_235,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," In 1940, a replacement, Pilot Officer T. B. ""Septic"" Baird, is landing his Hawker Hurricane at ""Pimpernel"" Squadron's airfield. Just as he touches down, however, a straggler from an earlier mission taxis across his path. Septic's quick reactions allow him to ""leapfrog"" the other Hurricane, averting a costly disaster. His action, however, causes him to crash his replacement aircraft into the bungalow of Squadron Leader Barry Clinton at the end of the runway. This earns Septic the wrath of his new squadron leader, Bill Ponsford, because he damaged his fighter aircraft. The crash also injures the ligaments in Septic's neck, which he is able to self-diagnose, as he had been a medical student before the war. The next morning, Septic is told by Group Captain ""Tiger"" Small that he will not be able to fly until his neck is healed, so he will instead serve in the operations room for the time being. Several days later, with the risk of a bombing attack on the airfield, and all of Pimpernel Squadron's Hurricanes scrambled, Tiger orders all aircraft to take off and fly out of harm's way until the raid is over. With Tiger quickly assembling all available pilots and finding aircraft to fly, Septic wins a foot race with Small to claim the last spare Hurricane for himself. He then proceeds to shoot down a Messerschmitt Bf 110 from the attacking force. His delight is short lived however when he is admonished by Small and Sqn Ldr Peter Moon for leaving his radio set to transmit, preventing the returning Hurricanes from being diverted to an undamaged airfield. A crestfallen Septic returns to his ground duties.",(1) What is the nickname of the man who crashes into the bungalow while landing?,"(2) Question: What crashes into Melancholia?, Answer: Earth.",(3) What is the nickname of the man who shoots at Bugs?,"(4) Question: What crashes into the lake?, Answer: Helicopter",(5) What happens to Jeff while biking and he overshoots his landing?,1,Septic. 001_259,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Doug is a flight instructor and owner of a pilot school. He, his wife Abby and their two daughters, Lindsay and Amanda face serious financial problems, as they are near financial ruin, and need $300,000 to expand the pilot school. Doug has to work hard and has hardly any time for his family, even arriving at home late on Christmas Eve. During the meal Doug receives a phone call from a lawyer who informs him that his parents are not his biological parents, but that he was adopted by an open adoption by them. The lawyer asks him to come to a meeting, where problems concerning his biological father are to be discussed. The lawyer introduces him to his half sister, Delilah, who was disowned from their father. Her only interest is to have her father judged unfit in order to sell his property. The lawyer asks whether they want to look after the property and their father. If they would, they would also take responsibility of him. Doug decides to do so without asking Abby.",(1) What are the last names of the three people who were facing deportation?,(2) What are the first names of the two that are reconciled?,(3) What are the first names of the family that is facing serious financial problems?,(4) What are the first names of the couple who face severe financial problems?,(5) When did grandparents start facing legal problems?,3,Doug. 001_179,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Talcott Williams (1849–1928), Benjamin Fox (c. 1865 – c. 1900), J. Laurie Wallace (1864–1953), Jesse Godley (1862–1889), Harry the dog (Eakins' Irish Setter, c. 1880–90), George Reynolds (c. 1839–89), and Eakins himself. The rocky promontory on which several of the men rest is the foundation of the Mill Creek mill, which was razed in 1873. It is the only sign of civilization in the work—no shoes, clothes, or bath houses are visible. The foliage in the background provides a dark background against which the swimmers' skin tones contrast. The positioning of the bodies and their musculature refers to classical ideals of physical beauty and masculine camaraderie evocative of Greek art. The reclining figure is a paraphrase of the Dying Gaul, and is juxtaposed with the far less formal self-depiction by the artist. It is possible that Eakins was seeking to reconcile an ancient theme with a modern interpretation; the subject was contemporary, but the poses of some of the figures recall those of classical sculpture. One possible influence by a contemporary source was Scène d'été, painted in 1869 by Frédéric Bazille (1841–70). It is not unlikely that Eakins saw the painting at the Salon while studying in Paris, and would have been sympathetic to its depiction of male bathers in a modern setting.In Eakins' oeuvre, The Swimming Hole was immediately preceded by a number of similar works on the Arcadian theme. These correspond to lectures he gave on Ancient Greek sculpture and were inspired by the Pennsylvania Academy's casts of Phidias' Pan-Athenaic procession from the Parthenon marbles. A series of photographs, relief sculptures, and oil sketches culminated in the 1883 Arcadia, a painting that also featured nude figures—posed for by a student, a nephew, and the artist's fiancée—in a pastoral landscape.",(1) What was the name of the person that painted The Old Swimming Hole?,(2) What is the name of the person that painted Las Meninas?,(3) What was the first name of the person who titled the painting The Old Swimming Hole?,(4) Who painted The Old Guitarist during his blue period?,(5) What was the name that Susan Macdowell Eakins changed the name of the painting before it was titled The Old Swimming Hole?,1,Frédéric Bazille. 001_40,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Harry Glicken (March 7, 1958 – June 3, 1991) was an American volcanologist. He researched Mount St. Helens in the United States before and after its 1980 eruption, and was very distraught about the death of fellow volcanologist David A. Johnston, who had switched shifts with Glicken so that the latter could attend an interview. In 1991, while conducting avalanche research on Mount Unzen in Japan, Glicken and fellow volcanologists Katia and Maurice Krafft were killed by a pyroclastic flow. His remains were found four days later, and were cremated in accordance with his parents' request. Glicken and Johnston remain the only American volcanologists known to have died in volcanic eruptions. Despite a long-term interest in working for the United States Geological Survey, Glicken never received a permanent post there because employees found him eccentric. Conducting independent research from sponsorships granted by the National Science Foundation and other organizations, Glicken accrued expertise in the field of volcanic debris avalanches. He also wrote several major publications on the topic, including his doctoral dissertation based on his research at St. Helens titled ""Rockslide-debris Avalanche of May 18, 1980, Mount St. Helens Volcano, Washington"" that initiated widespread interest in the phenomenon. Since being published posthumously by Glicken's colleagues in 1996, the report has been acknowledged by many other publications on debris avalanches. Following his death, Glicken was praised by associates for his love of volcanoes and commitment to his field.",(1) What is the last name of the person whose remains were found four days after a pyroclastic flow?,(2) What is the full name of the person that had their drawings reproduced?,(3) What is the last name of the person whose remains were found four days after his death?,(4) What is the full name of the person that had their remains found four days after they had died?,(5) What is the full name of the person that had William Clark as their commander?,4,Glicken. 001_441,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Thomson was largely self-taught. His experiences as a graphic designer with Toronto's Grip Ltd. honed his draughtsmanship. Although he began painting and drawing at an early age, it was only in 1912, when he was well into his thirties, that he began to paint seriously. His first trips to Algonquin Park inspired him to follow the lead of fellow artists in producing oil sketches of natural scenes on small, rectangular panels for easy portability while travelling. Between 1912 and his death in 1917, Thomson produced hundreds of these small sketches, many of which are now considered works in their own right, and are mostly found in the Art Gallery of Ontario in Toronto, the National Gallery of Canada in Ottawa, the McMichael Canadian Art Collection in Kleinburg and the Tom Thomson Art Gallery in Owen Sound.Thomson produced nearly all of his works between 1912 and 1917. Most of his large canvases were completed in his most productive period, from late 1916 to early 1917. The patronage of James MacCallum enabled Thomson's transition from graphic designer to professional painter. Although the Group of Seven was not founded until after his death, his work was sympathetic to that of group members A. Y. Jackson, Frederick Varley, and Arthur Lismer. These artists shared an appreciation for rugged, unkempt natural scenery, and all used broad brush strokes and a liberal application of paint to capture the beauty and colour of the Ontario landscape. Thomson's art also bears some stylistic resemblance to the work of European post-impressionists such as Vincent van Gogh. Other key influences were the Art Nouveau and Arts and Crafts movements of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, styles with which he became familiar while working in the graphic arts.",(1) What is the first name of the person who was wounded?,(2) What was the first name of the person who died?,(3) What is the first name of the person who was cremated?,(4) What is the first name of the person who was largely self-taught?,(5) What is the first name of the person who was uneducated?,4,Tom. 001_104,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," ""George is not disowning the Beatles ... but it was a long time ago and actually a short part of his life.""Harrison had an interest in sports cars and motor racing; he was one of the 100 people who purchased the McLaren F1 road car. He had collected photos of racing drivers and their cars since he was young; at 12 he had attended his first race, the 1955 British Grand Prix at Aintree. He wrote ""Faster"" as a tribute to the Formula One racing drivers Jackie Stewart and Ronnie Peterson. Proceeds from its release went to the Gunnar Nilsson cancer charity, set up after the Swedish driver's death from the disease in 1978. Harrison's first extravagant car, a 1964 Aston Martin DB5, was sold at auction on 7 December 2011 in London. An anonymous Beatles collector paid £350,000 for the vehicle that Harrison had bought new in January 1965.",(1) What were the last names of the two people who were married and McCartney was the best man?,(2) What were the last names of the two people who went to Los Angeles?,(3) What were the last names of the two people who were photographers for the album along with M.I.A.?,(4) What were the last names of the two people who were contemporaries at the Royal Academy?,(5) What were the last names of the two people who collapsed after being shot?,1,Friar Park. 001_381,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," a lullaby, now lost, and a polka which the composer mentioned in his autobiography. As his parents did not believe he had any future as a musician, they apprenticed him to a shopkeeper from a nearby village when he was fourteen; the shopkeeper went bankrupt by midsummer and Nielsen had to return home. After learning to play brass instruments, on 1 November 1879 he became a bugler and alto trombonist in the band of the army's 16th Battalion at nearby Odense.Nielsen did not give up the violin during his time with the battalion, continuing to play it when he went home to perform at dances with his father. The army paid him three kroner and 45 øre and a loaf of bread every five days for two and a half years, after which his salary was raised slightly, enabling him to buy the civilian clothes he needed to perform at barn dances.",(1) What is the first name of the person whose parent was a musician?,(2) What is the full name of the person whose father was arrested?,(3) What is the full name of the person whose father was murdered?,(4) What is the the name of the person whose father was a house painter and traditional musician?,(5) What is the first name of the person whose father was a herdsman and a farmer?,4,Nielsen. 001_154,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," The dominating colours in the Cottage Garden are hot saturated shades of red, orange, and yellow, a colour scheme that both Sackville-West and Nicolson claimed as their own conception. Lord considers it as much a traditional ""cottage garden as Marie Antoinette was a milkmaid"". Here, as elsewhere, Sackville-West was much influenced by William Robinson, a gardener she greatly admired and who had done much to popularise the concept of the cottage garden. It contains four beds, surrounded by simple paths, with planting in colours that Sackville-West described as those of the sunset. Plants include a range of dahlias, a particular favourite of Nicolson's, and the red-hot poker, which he despised. In a 1937 letter to his wife he observed, ""I think the secret of your gardening is simply that you have the courage to abolish ugly or unsuccessful flowers. Except for those beastly red-hot pokers which you have a weakness for, there is not an ugly flower in the whole place.""The Herb Garden contains sage, thyme, hyssop, fennel and an unusual seat built around a camomile bush. Known to the family as Edward the Confessor's chair, it was constructed by Copper, the Nicolson's chauffeur. Originally laid out in the 1930s, the garden was revitalised by John Vass in the years immediately after the Second World War. The Lion Basin in the centre of the garden was brought back from Turkey in 1914. Most of the over one hundred herbs in the garden are now started in the nurseries and planted out at appropriate times of year.",(1) What is the last name of Nicolson's wife?,(2) What is the name of Burke's wife?,(3) What is the name of Royal's wife?,(4) What is the name of Walter's wife?,(5) What is the last name of the person who is questioned by his wife?,1,Herb Garden. 001_127,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," A number of factors led to the popularity of Netherlandish illuminators. Primary was the tradition and expertise that developed in the region in the centuries following the monastic reform of the 14th century, building on the growth in number and prominence of monasteries, abbeys and churches from the 12th century that had already produced significant numbers of liturgical texts. There was a strong political aspect; the form had many influential patrons such as Jean, Duke of Berry and Philip the Good, the latter of whom collected more than a thousand illuminated books before his death. According to Thomas Kren, Philip's ""library was an expression of the man as a Christian prince, and an embodiment of the state – his politics and authority, his learning and piety"". Because of his patronage the manuscript industry in the Lowlands grew so that it dominated Europe for several generations. The Burgundian book-collecting tradition passed to Philip's son and his wife, Charles the Bold and Margaret of York; his granddaughter Mary of Burgundy and her husband Maximilian I; and to his son-in-law, Edward IV, who was an avid collector of Flemish manuscripts. The libraries left by Philip and Edward IV formed the nucleus from which sprang the Royal Library of Belgium and the English Royal Library.Netherlandish illuminators had an important export market, designing many works specifically for the English market. Following a decline in domestic patronage after Charles the Bold died in 1477, the export market became more important. Illuminators responded to differences in taste by producing more lavish and extravagantly decorated works tailored for foreign elites, including Edward IV of England, James IV of Scotland and Eleanor of Viseu.",(1) What is the full name of the person whose library was an expression of the man as a Christian prince?,(2) What is the full name of the person whose husband worked as a novelist?,(3) What is the full name of the person whose father was arrested?,(4) What is the full name of the person whose family was killed?,(5) What is the full name of the person whose father was murdered?,1,Charles. 001_111,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Jack Griffith, known as ""Papa"" to all, is a family man in a Texas town, but an irresponsibly eccentric one when he has had a drink too many. To impress his six-year-old daughter Corinne, he spends the family's savings to buy his own circus, simply so the little girl can have her own pony. His elder daughter Augusta becomes distraught as her father makes some questionable business deals under the influence of alcohol. This causes strife within the Griffith household and makes her beau's father (the local bank president) forbid his son to associate with the Griffith family. After his squandering leaves the Griffiths in debt, wife Ambolyn packs up Augusta and Corinne and moves to Texarkana, Texas, where her father, Anthony Ghio, is the mayor. Griffith attempts to use his circus to help Ghio's bid for reelection, but accidentally causes Ambolyn to end up with a broken hand. Despondent, he leaves for Louisiana and is little seen or heard from by the family. Talked into an attempt at reconciliation, Papa is reluctant, believing the Griffiths want nothing more to do with him, but he is welcomed back with open arms.",(1) What is the last name of the person who published under his own name?,(2) What is the last name of the person who got attacked by his own traps?,(3) What is the last name of the person who spends $84 on a hooker?,(4) What is the last name of the person who had to make his own fortunes?,(5) What is the last name of the person who spends the family's savings to buy his own circus?,5,Augusta. 001_243,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," After immigrant Mireya Sanchez is deported, ICE / Homeland Security Investigations Special Agent Max Brogan takes care of her little son and brings him to the boy's grandparents in Mexico. Later the woman is found dead near the border. Brogan returns to the grandparents to tell them the bad news. Taslima Jahangir, a 15-year-old girl from Bangladesh, presents a paper at school promoting that people should try to understand the 9/11 hijackers. The school principal reports this to authorities. FBI agents raid the home and ransack the girl's room, reading her diaries and a school assignment on the ethics of suicide; they criticize her room as ""too austere"" and note that she has an account on an Islamic website. The profiler says this makes her look like a would-be suicide bomber. Taslima is not charged for this, but it turns out that she stays in the United States illegally. She was born in Bangladesh and brought to the United States at age three. Taslima's continued presence jeopardizes her chances and puts at risk her two younger siblings, who are US citizens because they were born in the country. Denise Frankel, the immigration defense attorney, suggests that instead of the whole family's being deported, Taslima can leave for Bangladesh with her mother while the rest of the family stays in the U.S.",(1) Who is found dead in the morning?,(2) Which private university is located near the Edmond border?,(3) Who is found dead near the border?,(4) What country is found on Bulgaria's northern border?,(5) Who is found dead in Coffin Rock?,3,Mireya Sanchez. 001_444,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Terry asks his boss's wife Sylvia to his apartment after an office party and the two go to bed. Later, while he is in the bathroom, she hears screams outside and goes naked to the window. Seeing a man attacking a young woman, she opens the window and the assailant runs away. When the media report the murder of a young woman near Terry's flat that night, he thinks the police should know what Sylvia saw but, to protect her, claims he was at the bedroom window. At a police lineup, neither he nor the victim Denise is able to pick out the attacker Carl. Despite the feeble evidence against him, Carl is put on trial for the assault and during the proceedings his lawyer proves that since Terry is short-sighted he could not have witnessed the incident. Carl goes free, leaving not only the police and the prosecution but also Denise and Sylvia aghast at Terry's ineptness. In the courtroom, Carl recognised Sylvia as the woman at the window. Desperate to warn her, Terry finds her at a ballet performance and tells her she must go to the police, but she refuses all further involvement. As he leaves, he sees Carl's distinctive truck parked outside and rushes in again. He is too late, however, for in the dark she has been stabbed fatally and dies in Terry's arms. He takes refuge with Denise, who first seduces him and then offers him a chance to redeem himself. She wants revenge, and with him devises a plot to provoke Carl into another attack. Disguising herself, she goes to a bar where Carl is drinking and signals her availability. Terry follows her as she leaves to go home and, when Carl attacks, the two are able to repel him. He escapes, only to be caught by the police who Terry forewarned.",(1) What is the first name of the person who goes naked to a window?,(2) What is the name of the person who goes on a quest to Canada?,(3) What is the full name of the person who goes to bring Andy home?,(4) What's the name of the person who goes to a priest who knew her lover?,(5) What is the first name of the person who goes to San Francisco?,1,Terry. 001_177,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," ""Bix admitted to having used liquor 'in excess' for the past nine years, his daily dose over the last three years amounting to three pints of 'whiskey' and twenty cigarettes.....A Hepatic dullness was obvious, 'knee jerk could not be obtained' – which confirmed the spread of the polyneuritis, and Bix was 'swaying in Romberg position' – standing up with his eyes closed"".While he was away, Whiteman famously kept his chair open in Beiderbecke's honor, in the hope that he would occupy it again. However, when he returned to New York at the end of January 1930, Beiderbecke did not rejoin Whiteman and performed only sparingly. On his last recording session, in New York, on September 15, 1930, Beiderbecke played on the original recording of Hoagy Carmichael's new song, ""Georgia on My Mind"", with Carmichael doing the vocal, Eddie Lang on guitar, Joe Venuti on violin, Jimmy Dorsey on clarinet and alto saxophone, Jack Teagarden on trombone, and Bud Freeman on tenor saxophone. The song would go on to become a jazz and popular music standard. In 2014, the 1930 recording of ""Georgia on My Mind"" was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame.Beiderbecke's playing had an influence on Carmichael as a composer. One of his compositions, ""Stardust"", was inspired by Beiderbecke's improvisations, with a cornet phrase reworked by Carmichael into the song's central theme. Bing Crosby, who sang with Whiteman, also cited Beiderbecke as an important influence. ""Bix and all the rest would play and exchange ideas on the piano"", he said.",(1) When did HTML4 become standard?,(2) What is the name of the song that would become a jazz and popular music standard?,(3) What is the full name of the giant of popular music that the Bobcats celebrated?,(4) What is the name of the BOM standard?,(5) What was the name of the song that would go on to become a jazz and popular music standard?,2,Bix. 001_93,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," In 1939, Martin Kamen and Samuel Ruben of the Radiation Laboratory at Berkeley began experiments to determine if any of the elements common in organic matter had isotopes with half-lives long enough to be of value in biomedical research. They synthesized 14C using the laboratory's cyclotron accelerator and soon discovered that the atom's half-life was far longer than had been previously thought. This was followed by a prediction by Serge A. Korff, then employed at the Franklin Institute in Philadelphia, that the interaction of thermal neutrons with 14N in the upper atmosphere would create 14C. It had previously been thought that 14C would be more likely to be created by deuterons interacting with 13C. At some time during World War II, Willard Libby, who was then at Berkeley, learned of Korff's research and conceived the idea that it might be possible to use radiocarbon for dating.In 1945, Libby moved to the University of Chicago where he began his work on radiocarbon dating. He published a paper in 1946 in which he proposed that the carbon in living matter might include 14C as well as non-radioactive carbon. Libby and several collaborators proceeded to experiment with methane collected from sewage works in Baltimore, and after isotopically enriching their samples they were able to demonstrate that they contained 14C. By contrast, methane created from petroleum showed no radiocarbon activity because of its age. The results were summarized in a paper in Science in 1947, in which the authors commented that their results implied it would be possible to date materials containing carbon of organic origin.Libby and James Arnold proceeded to test the radiocarbon dating theory by analyzing samples with known ages. For example, two samples taken from the tombs of two Egyptian kings, Zoser and Sneferu, independently dated to 2625 BC plus or minus 75 years, were dated by radiocarbon measurement to an average of 2800 BC plus or minus 250 years. These results were published in Science in 1949. Within 11 years of their announcement, more than 20 radiocarbon dating laboratories had been set up worldwide. In 1960, Libby was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for this work.",(1) What is the name of the person that produced around 50 oil paintings in total as well as numerous pencil sketches?,(2) What is the last name of the person who worked as a governess while undertaking studies in art?,(3) What is the last name of the person who published a paper in 1946 in which he proposed that the carbon in living matter might include 14C as well as non-radioactive carbon??,(4) name a food that you can cook as well as it's cooked in most restaurants.,(5) What is the last name of the person who was appointed as chief engraver in 1844?,3,Libby. 001_50,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Joe Denton, a corrupt ex-cop, is released from jail. Six years earlier, while on the mob's payroll, Denton attacked district attorney Phil Coakley, earning him the enmity of the police and the nickname ""slash cop"". After finding his ex-wife has left the city with their children, he moves in with his elderly parents. Denton researches his ex-wife on the internet, eventually digging up a phone number. After briefly talking to one of his daughters, his ex-wife takes the phone and threatens to press charges if he ever contacts them again. Denton passes a bar on his way back home. Although a recovering alcoholic, he enters and orders a drink. His friend Scotty, the brother of Denton's slain partner, greets him and offers him any help he needs. A young woman asks Denton for a ride home. Denton is surprised when she reveals herself to be Coakley's daughter and intentionally bloodies herself. Cued by her cries for help, two men drag Denton from his car; Denton beats both men savagely. After Denton is questioned by the police, Coakley admits the evidence backs up his story and reluctantly asks if Denton wants to press charges. Denton declines, saying he wants to leave his history in the past, to the disgust of Coakley and Lieutenant Pleasant, who calls him a disgrace. Pleasant, revealed to also be corrupt, demands Denton kill mob boss Manny Vassey, who has found religion on his deathbed. Pleasant explains Vassey's guilty conscience may lead him to confess to Coakley. Pleasant promises to help Denton renegotiate the terms of the settlement with his ex-wife if he kills Vassey. At his house, Vassey denies the rumors. As Vassey falls asleep, Denton begins to suffocate him, only to be interrupted by Charlotte Boyd, Vassey's hospice nurse. Denton smoothly thanks her for her work and leaves the house, where he encounters Vassey's sadistic son, Junior. Junior threatens to kill Denton, enraged that Vassey would see him while avoiding his own son.",(1) Who did Nasser give asylum to?,(2) Who did Joe Denton give a ride to?,(3) Who did Wladyslaw give the throne to?,(4) Who does Lieutenant Pleasant want Joe Denton to kill?,(5) Who did Fairfax give a horse to?,2,Joe. 001_458,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Set in the early 1930s, Larita meets John Whittaker in Monaco. They marry and he takes his bride to the family mansion near Flintham in rural Nottinghamshire to meet his mother, Veronica Whittaker and father, Major Jim Whittaker and his two sisters, Hilda and Marion. Veronica, already predisposed to dislike her new daughter-in-law, is further disappointed to find that she, like Jim, speaks fluent French. Larita also meets John's former girlfriend and neighbour Sarah Hurst, who is gracious about the marriage. Larita makes some inadvertent gaffes, accidentally killing the family chihuahua and giving some joking advice to Hilda that unfortunately results in embarrassment to, and enmity from, the sisters. Sarah comes to the Whittakers' parties, and to play tennis, accompanied by her brother Philip, on whom Hilda has a crush. Philip, however, is infatuated with Larita, which further angers Hilda. Larita reveals she has been previously married and remains calm in the face of her mother-in-law's disdain. To Larita's disappointment, John is not eager to leave the estate so that they can find a home of their own. Larita is bored and miserable in the countryside and hates blood sports like hunting, and any of the entertainment that country English people seem to enjoy. She reads Lady Chatterley's Lover, shocking the female relatives, and she will not play tennis. She dislikes Veronica's stuffy decor, her constant entertaining of her friends, and the overcooked food. She tries to get along with Veronica who refuses to accept her and resents her attempts to bring American traditions into the home.",(1) What is the last name of the person whose attention was all given to his family?,(2) What is the name of the person John Wittaker takes to meet his family?,(3) Where did John Wittaker take Larita?,(4) What is the first name of the person whose return home was often difficult for his family?,(5) What is the last name of the person who was assisted by his family?,2,Larita. 001_485,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Before the 1760s, Westgate consisted of only a farm, a coastguard station (built 1791 and still standing in Old Boundary Road) and a few cottages for the crew that surrounded it. These were located beside the coast at St Mildred's Bay, named after Mildrith, Thanet's patron saint and a one-time Abbess of Minster. The town inherited its name from the Westgate Manor, which was located in the area in medieval times. In the early 20th century, the remains of a Roman villa were discovered in what is now Beach Road, where a stream once used to flow. Fresh water can still be seen rising from the sand at low tide. During the late 1860s, businessmen developed the area into a seaside resort for the upper to middle-classes. A stretch of sea wall, with promenade on top, was constructed around the beaches at St Mildred's Bay and West Bay, and the land divided into plots to be sold for what would become an exclusive development by the sea for wealthy metropolitan families within a gated community, rather than for occasional tourists. The opening of a railway station, in 1871, led to the rapid expansion of the population, which reached 2,738 by 1901. The demands of the increasing population led to the building of the parish churches of St. James in 1872 and St. Saviour in 1884. St. Saviour's was designed by the architect C.N. Beazley. In 1884 it was reported that Essex, on the other side of the Thames Estuary, was hit by a tremor so large that it caused the bells of St. James' Church to ring. In 1884, ownership of most of the resort passed to Coutts Bank, after the previous proprietors had gone bankrupt.Around twenty schools were opened during the late 19th century, although many had only a few pupils or closed within a few years. The largest of the schools were Streete Court School, Wellington House Preparatory School and St Michael's School.Wellington House was established in 1886 by two clergymen, the Bull brothers. It closed in 1970 and was demolished in 1972. Notable old boys included Doctor Who actor Jon Pertwee and cabinet minister John Profumo, known for his involvement in the Profumo affair. Streete Court School was opened in 1894 by John Vine Milne, the father of the author A. A. Milne. In the 1890s, the school was attended by St John Philby, the father of the spy Kim Philby.The Coronation Bandstand was built by the cliff edge in 1903, at a cost of £350, to celebrate the coronation of King Edward VII. The following year, a group of French Ursuline nuns, who were banned from teaching in France, fled with some of their pupils to Westgate-on-Sea and established the Ursuline Convent School, which in 1995 was re-established as Ursuline College. In 1910, a Swiss-Gothic styled town hall was built. However, it was soon decided that the building could be put to better use, and in 1912, it was transformed into the Town Hall Cinema. In 1932, it was renamed the Carlton Cinema.",(1) What is the current name of the plant species that was named after Sole?,(2) Who was appointed president in 1912?,(3) What is the current name of the building that was transformed in 1912?,(4) What is the first name of the person whose ship was trapped in March of 1912?,"(5) What is the name of the current building that was constructed in 1863, although the original purpose is obscure?",3,Carlton Cinema. 001_294,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Rolling Stone named ""Single Ladies"" the best song of 2008, and wrote, ""The beat ... is irresistible and exuberant, the vocal hook is stormy and virtuosic."" ""Single Ladies"" ranked as the second-best song of the 2000s decade in the magazine's 2009 readers' poll, and Rolling Stone critics placed it at number 50 on the list of the 100 Best Songs of the Decade. ""Single Ladies"" was placed at number two on MTV News' list of The Best Songs of 2008; James Montgomery called it ""hyperactive and supercharged in ways I never thought possible. It's epic and sexy and even a bit sad."" ""There is absolutely zero chance Beyoncé ever releases a single like this ever again"", Montgomery concluded. Time magazine's critic Josh Tyrangiel, who called the song ""ludicrously infectious"", ranked it as the seventh-best song of 2008. Douglas Wolf of the same publication placed it at number nine on his list of the All-Time 100 Songs.""Single Ladies"" appeared at number six on the Eye Weekly's critics' list of the Best Singles of 2008, and at number six on About.com's Mark Edward Nero's list of the Best R&B Songs of 2008. On The Village Voice's year-end Pazz & Jop singles list, ""Single Ladies"" was ranked at numbers three and forty one in 2008 and 2009 respectively. Additionally, the Maurice Joshua Club Mix of the song was ranked at number 443 on the 2008 list. ""Single Ladies"" was named the best song of the 2000s decade by Black Entertainment Television (BET). Sarah Rodman, writing for The Boston Globe, named ""Single Ladies"" the fourth most irresistible song of the decade, and stated, ""[Beyoncé] combined leotards with crass engagement-bling baiting into one delicious sexy-yet-antiquated package. The video had the whole world dancing and waving along via YouTube."" VH1 ranked ""Single Ladies"" at number sixteen on its list of The 100 Greatest Songs of the 2000s. In his book Eating the Dinosaur (2009), Chuck Klosterman wrote that ""Single Ladies"" is ""arguably the first song overtly marketed toward urban bachelorette parties"". Jody Rosen of The New Yorker credited the melodies that float and dart over the thump for creating a new sound in music that didn't exist in the world before Beyoncé. He further wrote, ""If they sound 'normal' now, it's because Beyoncé, and her many followers, have retrained our ears."".",(1) What publication placed the band that has influenced many newer artists as 94th on their list of The 100 Greatest Artists of All Time?,(2) What publication listed the first single by the band that named themselves after rapid eye movement one of the ten best of the year?,(3) What is the name of the publication who's critic claimed the songs on the album lack lyrical substance?,"(4) What publication listed the ""ludicrously infectious"" single as sixteenth on the 100 Greatest songs of the 2000s?","(5) What two songs were released as a double A-side single on November 7, 2008?",4,VH1. 001_115,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Tom Thomson again reveals his capacity to be modern and remain individual. His early pictures—in which the quality of naivete had all the genuineness of the effort of the tyro and was not the counterfeit of it which is so much in evidence in the intensely rejuvenated works of the highly sophisticated—showed the faculty for affectionate and truthful record by a receptive eye and faithful hand; but his work today has reached higher levels of technical accomplishment. His Moonlight, Spring Ice and The Birches are among his best. In The Canadian Courier, painter Estelle Kerr also spoke positively, describing Thomson as ""one of the most promising of Canadian painters who follows the impressionist movement and his work reveals himself to be a fine colourist, a clever technician, and a truthful interpreter of the north land in its various aspects"".In 1916, Thomson left for Algonquin Park earlier than any previous year, evidenced by the many snow studies he produced at this time. In April or early May, MacCallum, Harris and his cousin Chester Harris joined Thomson at Cauchon Lake for a canoe trip. After MacCallum and Chester left, Harris and Thomson paddled together to Aura Lee Lake. Thomson produced many sketches which varied in composition, although they all had vivid colour and thickly-applied paint. MacCallum was present when he painted his Sketch for ""The Jack Pine"", writing that the tree fell over onto Thomson before the sketch was completed. He added that Harris thought the tree killed Thomson, ""but he sprang up and continued painting"".",(1) What are the last names of the two people who go drinking?,(2) What are the last names of the two individuals who were convinced to purchase Spring Ice?,(3) What are the last names of the two people who are assigned to watch Disraeli?,(4) What are the names of 2 individuals who were unleashing a reign of terror?,(5) What are the last names of the two individuals who were to maintain a correspondence over thirty years?,2,Thomson. 001_114,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Tom Thomson again reveals his capacity to be modern and remain individual. His early pictures—in which the quality of naivete had all the genuineness of the effort of the tyro and was not the counterfeit of it which is so much in evidence in the intensely rejuvenated works of the highly sophisticated—showed the faculty for affectionate and truthful record by a receptive eye and faithful hand; but his work today has reached higher levels of technical accomplishment. His Moonlight, Spring Ice and The Birches are among his best. In The Canadian Courier, painter Estelle Kerr also spoke positively, describing Thomson as ""one of the most promising of Canadian painters who follows the impressionist movement and his work reveals himself to be a fine colourist, a clever technician, and a truthful interpreter of the north land in its various aspects"".In 1916, Thomson left for Algonquin Park earlier than any previous year, evidenced by the many snow studies he produced at this time. In April or early May, MacCallum, Harris and his cousin Chester Harris joined Thomson at Cauchon Lake for a canoe trip. After MacCallum and Chester left, Harris and Thomson paddled together to Aura Lee Lake. Thomson produced many sketches which varied in composition, although they all had vivid colour and thickly-applied paint. MacCallum was present when he painted his Sketch for ""The Jack Pine"", writing that the tree fell over onto Thomson before the sketch was completed. He added that Harris thought the tree killed Thomson, ""but he sprang up and continued painting"".",(1) What are the last names of the two individuals who were to maintain a correspondence over thirty years?,(2) What are the names of 2 individuals who were unleashing a reign of terror?,(3) What are the last names of the two people who are assigned to watch Disraeli?,(4) What are the last names of the two individuals who were convinced to purchase Spring Ice?,(5) What are the last names of the two people who go drinking?,4,Thomson. 001_254,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Furnace Trail (for the iron furnace), CCC Trail, and Plantation Loop (for the plantations of trees planted by the CCC).",(1) What is the name of the trail system that has a parking area at the site of the former CCC camp S-82-Pa?,(2) What is the name of the area that has a resident population of common bottlenose dolphins?,(3) What is the name of a system that meets the EAL4 standard?,(4) What is the name of the trail that crosses Pioneer Rock?,(5) What is the name of the area that has a year-round population of double-crested cormorants?,1,Haneyville ATV Trail. 001_4,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Philip Arnold Heseltine (30 October 1894 – 17 December 1930), known by the pseudonym Peter Warlock, was a British composer and music critic. The Warlock name, which reflects Heseltine's interest in occult practices, was used for all his published musical works. He is best known as a composer of songs and other vocal music; he also achieved notoriety in his lifetime through his unconventional and often scandalous lifestyle. As a schoolboy at Eton College, Heseltine met the British composer Frederick Delius, with whom he formed a close friendship. After a failed student career in Oxford and London, Heseltine turned to musical journalism, while developing interests in folk-song and Elizabethan music. His first serious compositions date from around 1915. Following a period of inactivity, a positive and lasting influence on his work arose from his meeting in 1916 with the Dutch composer Bernard van Dieren; he also gained creative impetus from a year spent in Ireland, studying Celtic culture and language. On his return to England in 1918, Heseltine began composing songs in a distinctive, original style, while building a reputation as a combative and controversial music critic. During 1920–21 he edited the music magazine The Sackbut. His most prolific period as a composer came in the 1920s, when he was based first in Wales and later at Eynsford in Kent. Through his critical writings, published under his own name, Heseltine made a pioneering contribution to the scholarship of early music. In addition, he produced a full-length biography of Frederick Delius and wrote, edited, or otherwise assisted the production of several other books and pamphlets. Towards the end of his life, Heseltine became depressed by a loss of his creative inspiration. He died in his London flat of coal gas poisoning in 1930, probably by his own hand.",(1) What is the last name of the person who is best known as a composer of songs and other vocal music?,(2) What is the last name of the person who took vocal lessons with J.E. Hutchinson?,(3) What is the last name of the person who was employed as a court composer at Brunswick in 1694?,(4) What is the last name of the person who is best known for his mid-period allegorical landscapes?,(5) What is the last name of the person who recorded several albums of original music?,1,Heseltine. 001_419,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Edward Dalyngrigge was a younger son and thus deprived of his father's estates through the practice of primogeniture, hence he had to make his own fortunes. By 1378, he owned the manor of Bodiam by marrying into a land-owning family. From 1379 to 1388, Dalyngrigge was a Knight of the Shire for Sussex and one of the most influential people in the county. By the time he applied to the king for a licence to crenellate (build a castle), the Hundred Years' War had been fought between England and France for nearly 50 years. Edward III of England (reigned 1327–1377) pressed his claim for the French throne and secured the territories of Aquitaine and Calais. Dalyngrigge was one of many Englishmen who travelled to France to seek their fortune as members of Free Companies – groups of mercenaries who fought for the highest bidder. He left for France in 1367 and journeyed with Lionel, Duke of Clarence and son of Edward III. After fighting under the Earl of Arundel, Dalyngrigge joined the company of Sir Robert Knolles, a notorious commander who was reputed to have made 100,000 gold crowns as a mercenary from pillage and plunder. It was as a member of the Free Companies that Dalyngrigge raised the money to build Bodiam Castle; he returned to England in 1377.The Treaty of Bruges (1375) ensured peace for two years, but after it expired, fighting resumed between England and France. In 1377 Edward III was succeeded by Richard II. During the war, England and France struggled for control of the English Channel, with raids on both coasts. With the renewed hostilities, Parliament voted that money should be spent on defending and fortifying England's south coast, and defences were erected in Kent in anticipation of a French invasion. There was internal unrest as well as external threats, and Dalyngrigge was involved in suppressing the Peasants' Revolt of 1381. The manor of Bodiam was granted a charter in 1383 permitting a weekly market and an annual fair to be held. In 1385, a fleet of 1,200 ships – variously cogs, barges, and galleys – gathered across the English Channel at Sluys, Flanders; the population of southern England was in a state of panic. Later in the year, Edward Dalyngrigge was granted a licence to fortify his manor house.",(1) What is the last name of the person who published under his own name?,(2) What is the last name of the person who positioned his own army between the Franks and Mongols?,(3) What is the last name of the person who got attacked by his own traps?,(4) What is the last name of the person who wants to his daughter to have her own pony?,(5) What is the last name of the person who had to make his own fortunes?,5,Dalyngrigge. 001_351,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," Following the Seven Years' War (1756–63) and the forced migration of Native American tribes westward, German, Scots-Irish, and other European immigrants settled in the central Susquehanna Valley, including in the area that would become Northumberland, Pennsylvania. Northumberland was laid out around a central village green in 1772, on land originally purchased from the Iroquois by the Province of Pennsylvania in 1768, as part of the first Treaty of Fort Stanwix. During the American Revolution, the village was evacuated as part of the Big Runaway in 1778, and only finally resettled in 1784. In 1794, when the Priestleys moved there, it included Quaker and Wesleyan meeting houses, a brewery, two potteries, a potash manufacturer, a clock maker, a printer (who issued a weekly newspaper), several stores, and approximately one hundred houses. The Priestley property, purchased in 1794 at a total cost of £500 (£ 56,400 in 2019) from Reuben Haines, who had secured the patent to the land for Northumberland, comprised four lots of the original village plan (numbers 29–32). Currently, the house and grounds occupy 1 acre (4,000 m²) at 472 Priestley Avenue. (The address of the house was originally ""North Way"", but the street was later renamed in honor of Joseph Priestley.) This street forms the northwest boundary of the property; the other boundaries are Hanover Avenue to the northeast, Wallis Street to the southwest, and the North Shore Railroad to the southeast. Beyond the railroad line is a baseball field, and beyond that lies the Susquehanna River, which was the original southeastern boundary of the property. The confluence of the West Branch Susquehanna River with the main (or North) branch of the Susquehanna is a short distance southwest of the property, which is at an elevation of 456 feet (139 m).The property's original area was 2 acres (8,000 m²), but this was reduced by about half around 1830 when the Pennsylvania Canal (North Branch Division) was dug through the house's front yard, between the house and river. On May 31, 1860, the Lackawanna and Bloomsburg Railroad opened with a train from Danville. This was the second railroad track in Northumberland, and ran behind the house. The canal closed in 1902 and was later filled in. The modern railroad line approximates the canal's course through the front yard; the track behind the house no longer exists.",(1) What state did Benjamin move to?,(2) Where did Alice and Virginia Madden move to?,(3) Where does Chris move to?,(4) What town does Elinor move to?,(5) What village did the Priestleys move to?,5,North Way. 001_435,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," After selecting the music by Alexandrov for the national anthem, Stalin needed new lyrics. He thought that the song was short and, because of the Great Patriotic War, that it needed a statement about the impending defeat of Germany by the Red Army. The poets Sergey Mikhalkov and Gabriel El-Registan were called to Moscow by one of Stalin's staffers, and were told to fix the lyrics to Alexandrov's music. They were instructed to keep the verses the same, but to find a way to change the refrains which described ""a Country of Soviets"". Because of the difficulty of expressing the concepts of the Great Patriotic War in song, that idea was dropped from the version which El-Registan and Mikhalkov completed overnight. After a few minor changes to emphasize the Russian Motherland, Stalin approved the anthem and had it published on 7 November 1943, including a line about Stalin ""inspir[ing] us to keep the faith with the people"". The revised anthem was announced to all of the USSR on January 1, 1944 and became official on March 15, 1944.After Stalin's death in 1953, the Soviet government examined his legacy. The government began the de-Stalinization process, which included downplaying the role of Stalin and moving his corpse from Lenin's Mausoleum to the Kremlin Wall Necropolis. In addition, the anthem lyrics composed by Mikhalkov and El-Registan were officially scrapped by the Soviet government in 1956. The anthem was still used by the Soviet government, but without any official lyrics. In private, this anthem became known the ""Song Without Words"". Mikhalkov wrote a new set of lyrics in 1970, but they were not submitted to the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet until May 27, 1977. The new lyrics, which eliminated any mention of Stalin, were approved on 1 September, and were made official with the printing of the new Soviet Constitution in October 1977. In the credits for the 1977 lyrics, Mikhalkov was mentioned, but references to El-Registan, who died in 1945, were dropped for unknown reasons.",(1) What is the first name of the person who was a Russian cultural ambassador to Weimar Germany?,(2) What is the last name of the person that Rhodes assists to defeat the miners?,(3) What is the last name of the person whose statement was broadcast that evening?,(4) What is the full name of the person that wanted to commit suicide?,(5) What is the name of the person that wanted to add a statement about the impending defeat of Germany?,5,October. 001_474,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," A childhood accident leaves Leo mute and his devout Amish mother refuses surgery. As an adult in 2035, he works as a bartender at a Berlin strip club owned by Maksim and dates cocktail waitress Naadirah. She confides in her friend Luba that she has not told Leo about her past or her desperate need for money. After Stuart, a rowdy customer, sexually harasses Naadirah, Leo assaults him. Naadirah talks Leo down by telling him that she needs to keep her job. Naadirah shows up at Leo's apartment and attempts to tell him about something important. Leo shows her an elaborate bed he has been carving as a present for her. Naadirah is overcome with emotion and they have sex. Elsewhere, Maksim's mobsters meet two American surgeons, Cactus Bill and Duck, who run a black-market clinic. Bill desperately wants to leave Berlin and has pressed Maksim to provide forged documents for him and his young daughter, Josie. Duck, however, enjoys living in Berlin and runs a side business where he installs implants and performs cybernetic surgery. Stuart returns to the strip club and taunts Leo, leading to a fight and Maksim firing Leo. When he's unable to contact Naadirah, Leo asks Luba for help, but Luba refuses. An anonymous text message leads Leo to a black-market bazaar run by Stuart. Bill and Josie are there, and Bill takes Josie away as Stuart confronts Leo. Suddenly remembering that Naadirah wrote an address on his notepad a while back, Leo leaves the bazaar after using charcoal to read the imprint. Naadirah's address leads Leo to Oswald. When Leo expresses interest in a picture of Naadirah, Oswald assumes Leo works for Maksim's underling Nicky Simsek, who is skimming money from Maksim's prostitutes. Leo meets with Simsek, who is babysitting Josie. Leo befriends Josie and leaves the money from Oswald and a note incriminating Simsek in front of Maksim's henchmen.",(1) Who was Conrad dating with?,(2) Who is dating Naadirah?,(3) Who is Brittany dating off an on?,(4) Who is dating the sheriff?,(5) Who is dating Kate?,2,Leo. 001_360,Go through the provided list of questions and choose the one that is answerable given the context. Return the answer in N format.,Answer the question you have chosen in step #1. Return the answer in N format.," After two more EPs on Kompakt, the Orb (now composed of only Paterson and Fehlmann) released Okie Dokie It's The Orb on Kompakt, which featured new material in addition to tweaked versions of their previous Kompakt output. By this stage, Allmusic observed, Thomas Fehlmann had become the primary creative figure in the Orb, ""inhibiting Alex Paterson's whimsical impulses"". Because of this, Okie Dokie was considerably more focused and less ""goofy"" than Cydonia and Bicycles & Tricycles. Fehlmann's trademark hypnotic loops and delays made him the centre of Okie Dokie production and, according to Pitchfork Media, made it ""difficult to say where [Paterson] is in the picture"". The Orb's releases with Kompakt gained them back much of their musical credibility with the press and showed that they could ""age gracefully"".In August 2006, the founders of the Orb - Paterson and Cauty - released Living in a Giant Candle Winking at God, their debut album as the Transit Kings with Guy Pratt and Pratt's associate, Dom Beken. The album featured appearances from Smiths' guitarist Johnny Marr and comedian Simon Day. Beken described Living in a Giant Candle Winking at God as ""self-consciously musically written and less sample-based"" compared to the members' previous work. Living had been in production since 2001, but due to members' other obligations, it was delayed for several years. The album received mixed critical reactions, with reviewers such as The Sun comparing the album favourably to the music of DJ Shadow and Röyksopp while other publications, such as The Times, called it ""Orb-lite"" and proclaimed it to be ""Deep Forest-style sludge"". Soon after the album's release, Cauty left the Transit Kings on ""extended leave"", leaving the project in indefinite limbo. Paterson and Beken reunited in 2008 as High Frequency Bandwidth, an ambient hip hop group on the Malicious Damage label.",(1) What are the first names of the two people who are engaged?,(2) What are the first names of David's two children?,(3) What are the first names of Laury's two boyfriends?,(4) What are the names of the two staff members from WGON Television?,(5) What are the first names of the only two remaining members of Orb?,5,Alex.