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acf-co24-1-1_1 | Twenty-seven theses on this dispute by Vasily Bolotov coined a distinction between dogma, theologoumena, and mere opinion. | [
"Filioquism",
"answers indicating the question of whether the Holy Spirit proceeds from both the Father and the Son; reject answers that use the words proceeds through",
"Filioque controversy",
"anti-Filioquism"
] | acf-co24-1-1 | 1 | Twenty-seven theses on this dispute by Vasily Bolotov coined a distinction between dogma, theologoumena, and mere opinion. Edward Siecienski’s book on this dispute argues that the “Letter to Marinus” is the best hope for resolving it, which was the goal of the Klingenthal Memorandum. The parties in this dispute offer differing interpretations of John 15:26’s use of the verb ekporeuesthai. Mark of Ephesus’s opposition to compromise on this theological dispute made him one of the three Pillars of Orthodoxy after the Council of Ferrara-Florence. A position in this dispute was attacked in the Mystagogy of the Holy Spirit during the Photian Schism. One side of this dispute holds that no hypostatic property is shared by only two of the three persons in the Trinity and argues for a “monarchy” of the Father. For 10 points, name this dispute that began after anti-Arian Latin churches added a word meaning “and the Son” to the Nicene Creed. | Filioque (“fill-ee-OH-kway”) controversy [accept Filioquism or anti-Filioquism; accept answers indicating the question of whether the Holy Spirit proceeds from both the Father and the Son; reject answers that use the words “proceeds through”; prompt on the East–West schism; prompt on answers about reuniting the Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Church] | [
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"category": "religion",
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"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"religion"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-1_2 | Edward Siecienski’s book on this dispute argues that the “Letter to Marinus” is the best hope for resolving it, which was the goal of the Klingenthal Memorandum. | [
"Filioquism",
"answers indicating the question of whether the Holy Spirit proceeds from both the Father and the Son; reject answers that use the words proceeds through",
"Filioque controversy",
"anti-Filioquism"
] | acf-co24-1-1 | 2 | Twenty-seven theses on this dispute by Vasily Bolotov coined a distinction between dogma, theologoumena, and mere opinion. Edward Siecienski’s book on this dispute argues that the “Letter to Marinus” is the best hope for resolving it, which was the goal of the Klingenthal Memorandum. The parties in this dispute offer differing interpretations of John 15:26’s use of the verb ekporeuesthai. Mark of Ephesus’s opposition to compromise on this theological dispute made him one of the three Pillars of Orthodoxy after the Council of Ferrara-Florence. A position in this dispute was attacked in the Mystagogy of the Holy Spirit during the Photian Schism. One side of this dispute holds that no hypostatic property is shared by only two of the three persons in the Trinity and argues for a “monarchy” of the Father. For 10 points, name this dispute that began after anti-Arian Latin churches added a word meaning “and the Son” to the Nicene Creed. | Filioque (“fill-ee-OH-kway”) controversy [accept Filioquism or anti-Filioquism; accept answers indicating the question of whether the Holy Spirit proceeds from both the Father and the Son; reject answers that use the words “proceeds through”; prompt on the East–West schism; prompt on answers about reuniting the Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Church] | [
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"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"religion"
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acf-co24-1-1_3 | The parties in this dispute offer differing interpretations of John 15:26’s use of the verb ekporeuesthai. | [
"Filioquism",
"answers indicating the question of whether the Holy Spirit proceeds from both the Father and the Son; reject answers that use the words proceeds through",
"Filioque controversy",
"anti-Filioquism"
] | acf-co24-1-1 | 3 | Twenty-seven theses on this dispute by Vasily Bolotov coined a distinction between dogma, theologoumena, and mere opinion. Edward Siecienski’s book on this dispute argues that the “Letter to Marinus” is the best hope for resolving it, which was the goal of the Klingenthal Memorandum. The parties in this dispute offer differing interpretations of John 15:26’s use of the verb ekporeuesthai. Mark of Ephesus’s opposition to compromise on this theological dispute made him one of the three Pillars of Orthodoxy after the Council of Ferrara-Florence. A position in this dispute was attacked in the Mystagogy of the Holy Spirit during the Photian Schism. One side of this dispute holds that no hypostatic property is shared by only two of the three persons in the Trinity and argues for a “monarchy” of the Father. For 10 points, name this dispute that began after anti-Arian Latin churches added a word meaning “and the Son” to the Nicene Creed. | Filioque (“fill-ee-OH-kway”) controversy [accept Filioquism or anti-Filioquism; accept answers indicating the question of whether the Holy Spirit proceeds from both the Father and the Son; reject answers that use the words “proceeds through”; prompt on the East–West schism; prompt on answers about reuniting the Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Church] | [
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813,
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"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"religion"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-1_4 | Mark of Ephesus’s opposition to compromise on this theological dispute made him one of the three Pillars of Orthodoxy after the Council of Ferrara-Florence. | [
"Filioquism",
"answers indicating the question of whether the Holy Spirit proceeds from both the Father and the Son; reject answers that use the words proceeds through",
"Filioque controversy",
"anti-Filioquism"
] | acf-co24-1-1 | 4 | Twenty-seven theses on this dispute by Vasily Bolotov coined a distinction between dogma, theologoumena, and mere opinion. Edward Siecienski’s book on this dispute argues that the “Letter to Marinus” is the best hope for resolving it, which was the goal of the Klingenthal Memorandum. The parties in this dispute offer differing interpretations of John 15:26’s use of the verb ekporeuesthai. Mark of Ephesus’s opposition to compromise on this theological dispute made him one of the three Pillars of Orthodoxy after the Council of Ferrara-Florence. A position in this dispute was attacked in the Mystagogy of the Holy Spirit during the Photian Schism. One side of this dispute holds that no hypostatic property is shared by only two of the three persons in the Trinity and argues for a “monarchy” of the Father. For 10 points, name this dispute that began after anti-Arian Latin churches added a word meaning “and the Son” to the Nicene Creed. | Filioque (“fill-ee-OH-kway”) controversy [accept Filioquism or anti-Filioquism; accept answers indicating the question of whether the Holy Spirit proceeds from both the Father and the Son; reject answers that use the words “proceeds through”; prompt on the East–West schism; prompt on answers about reuniting the Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Church] | [
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"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
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"religion"
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acf-co24-1-1_5 | A position in this dispute was attacked in the Mystagogy of the Holy Spirit during the Photian Schism. | [
"Filioquism",
"answers indicating the question of whether the Holy Spirit proceeds from both the Father and the Son; reject answers that use the words proceeds through",
"Filioque controversy",
"anti-Filioquism"
] | acf-co24-1-1 | 5 | Twenty-seven theses on this dispute by Vasily Bolotov coined a distinction between dogma, theologoumena, and mere opinion. Edward Siecienski’s book on this dispute argues that the “Letter to Marinus” is the best hope for resolving it, which was the goal of the Klingenthal Memorandum. The parties in this dispute offer differing interpretations of John 15:26’s use of the verb ekporeuesthai. Mark of Ephesus’s opposition to compromise on this theological dispute made him one of the three Pillars of Orthodoxy after the Council of Ferrara-Florence. A position in this dispute was attacked in the Mystagogy of the Holy Spirit during the Photian Schism. One side of this dispute holds that no hypostatic property is shared by only two of the three persons in the Trinity and argues for a “monarchy” of the Father. For 10 points, name this dispute that began after anti-Arian Latin churches added a word meaning “and the Son” to the Nicene Creed. | Filioque (“fill-ee-OH-kway”) controversy [accept Filioquism or anti-Filioquism; accept answers indicating the question of whether the Holy Spirit proceeds from both the Father and the Son; reject answers that use the words “proceeds through”; prompt on the East–West schism; prompt on answers about reuniting the Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Church] | [
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"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"religion"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-1_6 | One side of this dispute holds that no hypostatic property is shared by only two of the three persons in the Trinity and argues for a “monarchy” of the Father. | [
"Filioquism",
"answers indicating the question of whether the Holy Spirit proceeds from both the Father and the Son; reject answers that use the words proceeds through",
"Filioque controversy",
"anti-Filioquism"
] | acf-co24-1-1 | 6 | Twenty-seven theses on this dispute by Vasily Bolotov coined a distinction between dogma, theologoumena, and mere opinion. Edward Siecienski’s book on this dispute argues that the “Letter to Marinus” is the best hope for resolving it, which was the goal of the Klingenthal Memorandum. The parties in this dispute offer differing interpretations of John 15:26’s use of the verb ekporeuesthai. Mark of Ephesus’s opposition to compromise on this theological dispute made him one of the three Pillars of Orthodoxy after the Council of Ferrara-Florence. A position in this dispute was attacked in the Mystagogy of the Holy Spirit during the Photian Schism. One side of this dispute holds that no hypostatic property is shared by only two of the three persons in the Trinity and argues for a “monarchy” of the Father. For 10 points, name this dispute that began after anti-Arian Latin churches added a word meaning “and the Son” to the Nicene Creed. | Filioque (“fill-ee-OH-kway”) controversy [accept Filioquism or anti-Filioquism; accept answers indicating the question of whether the Holy Spirit proceeds from both the Father and the Son; reject answers that use the words “proceeds through”; prompt on the East–West schism; prompt on answers about reuniting the Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Church] | [
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"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"religion"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-1_7 | For 10 points, name this dispute that began after anti-Arian Latin churches added a word meaning “and the Son” to the Nicene Creed. | [
"Filioquism",
"answers indicating the question of whether the Holy Spirit proceeds from both the Father and the Son; reject answers that use the words proceeds through",
"Filioque controversy",
"anti-Filioquism"
] | acf-co24-1-1 | 7 | Twenty-seven theses on this dispute by Vasily Bolotov coined a distinction between dogma, theologoumena, and mere opinion. Edward Siecienski’s book on this dispute argues that the “Letter to Marinus” is the best hope for resolving it, which was the goal of the Klingenthal Memorandum. The parties in this dispute offer differing interpretations of John 15:26’s use of the verb ekporeuesthai. Mark of Ephesus’s opposition to compromise on this theological dispute made him one of the three Pillars of Orthodoxy after the Council of Ferrara-Florence. A position in this dispute was attacked in the Mystagogy of the Holy Spirit during the Photian Schism. One side of this dispute holds that no hypostatic property is shared by only two of the three persons in the Trinity and argues for a “monarchy” of the Father. For 10 points, name this dispute that began after anti-Arian Latin churches added a word meaning “and the Son” to the Nicene Creed. | Filioque (“fill-ee-OH-kway”) controversy [accept Filioquism or anti-Filioquism; accept answers indicating the question of whether the Holy Spirit proceeds from both the Father and the Son; reject answers that use the words “proceeds through”; prompt on the East–West schism; prompt on answers about reuniting the Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Church] | [
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813,
944
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"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"religion"
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acf-co24-1-2_1 | A “Copernican revolution” begun by this thinker inspired a follower to explain how part of the self is “maintained in its radical alterity by the other person.” | [
"Sigmund Freud"
] | acf-co24-1-2 | 1 | A “Copernican revolution” begun by this thinker inspired a follower to explain how part of the self is “maintained in its radical alterity by the other person.” A theory from this thinker was explained in terms of “enigmatic signifiers” by a scholar who often worked with Jean-Bertrand Pontalis. Max Schur examined the guilt experienced by this thinker after botched surgery conducted by a friend left gauze in Emma Eckstein’s nose. In The Assault on Truth, Jeffrey Masson cites this thinker’s letters to Wilhelm Fliess to explain why this thinker abandoned one theory. This thinker inspired a Hungarian scholar to contrast tender children with the passionate talk they hear. The “confusion of tongues” theory of Sándor Ferenczi was inspired by this thinker’s “seduction theory,” which held that childhood abuse caused hysteria. For 10 points, name this thinker who analyzed his own dream of Irma being given an injection. | Sigmund Freud | [
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"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
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acf-co24-1-2_2 | A theory from this thinker was explained in terms of “enigmatic signifiers” by a scholar who often worked with Jean-Bertrand Pontalis. | [
"Sigmund Freud"
] | acf-co24-1-2 | 2 | A “Copernican revolution” begun by this thinker inspired a follower to explain how part of the self is “maintained in its radical alterity by the other person.” A theory from this thinker was explained in terms of “enigmatic signifiers” by a scholar who often worked with Jean-Bertrand Pontalis. Max Schur examined the guilt experienced by this thinker after botched surgery conducted by a friend left gauze in Emma Eckstein’s nose. In The Assault on Truth, Jeffrey Masson cites this thinker’s letters to Wilhelm Fliess to explain why this thinker abandoned one theory. This thinker inspired a Hungarian scholar to contrast tender children with the passionate talk they hear. The “confusion of tongues” theory of Sándor Ferenczi was inspired by this thinker’s “seduction theory,” which held that childhood abuse caused hysteria. For 10 points, name this thinker who analyzed his own dream of Irma being given an injection. | Sigmund Freud | [
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"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
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acf-co24-1-2_3 | Max Schur examined the guilt experienced by this thinker after botched surgery conducted by a friend left gauze in Emma Eckstein’s nose. | [
"Sigmund Freud"
] | acf-co24-1-2 | 3 | A “Copernican revolution” begun by this thinker inspired a follower to explain how part of the self is “maintained in its radical alterity by the other person.” A theory from this thinker was explained in terms of “enigmatic signifiers” by a scholar who often worked with Jean-Bertrand Pontalis. Max Schur examined the guilt experienced by this thinker after botched surgery conducted by a friend left gauze in Emma Eckstein’s nose. In The Assault on Truth, Jeffrey Masson cites this thinker’s letters to Wilhelm Fliess to explain why this thinker abandoned one theory. This thinker inspired a Hungarian scholar to contrast tender children with the passionate talk they hear. The “confusion of tongues” theory of Sándor Ferenczi was inspired by this thinker’s “seduction theory,” which held that childhood abuse caused hysteria. For 10 points, name this thinker who analyzed his own dream of Irma being given an injection. | Sigmund Freud | [
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"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
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acf-co24-1-2_4 | In The Assault on Truth, Jeffrey Masson cites this thinker’s letters to Wilhelm Fliess to explain why this thinker abandoned one theory. | [
"Sigmund Freud"
] | acf-co24-1-2 | 4 | A “Copernican revolution” begun by this thinker inspired a follower to explain how part of the self is “maintained in its radical alterity by the other person.” A theory from this thinker was explained in terms of “enigmatic signifiers” by a scholar who often worked with Jean-Bertrand Pontalis. Max Schur examined the guilt experienced by this thinker after botched surgery conducted by a friend left gauze in Emma Eckstein’s nose. In The Assault on Truth, Jeffrey Masson cites this thinker’s letters to Wilhelm Fliess to explain why this thinker abandoned one theory. This thinker inspired a Hungarian scholar to contrast tender children with the passionate talk they hear. The “confusion of tongues” theory of Sándor Ferenczi was inspired by this thinker’s “seduction theory,” which held that childhood abuse caused hysteria. For 10 points, name this thinker who analyzed his own dream of Irma being given an injection. | Sigmund Freud | [
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acf-co24-1-2_5 | This thinker inspired a Hungarian scholar to contrast tender children with the passionate talk they hear. | [
"Sigmund Freud"
] | acf-co24-1-2 | 5 | A “Copernican revolution” begun by this thinker inspired a follower to explain how part of the self is “maintained in its radical alterity by the other person.” A theory from this thinker was explained in terms of “enigmatic signifiers” by a scholar who often worked with Jean-Bertrand Pontalis. Max Schur examined the guilt experienced by this thinker after botched surgery conducted by a friend left gauze in Emma Eckstein’s nose. In The Assault on Truth, Jeffrey Masson cites this thinker’s letters to Wilhelm Fliess to explain why this thinker abandoned one theory. This thinker inspired a Hungarian scholar to contrast tender children with the passionate talk they hear. The “confusion of tongues” theory of Sándor Ferenczi was inspired by this thinker’s “seduction theory,” which held that childhood abuse caused hysteria. For 10 points, name this thinker who analyzed his own dream of Irma being given an injection. | Sigmund Freud | [
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"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
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acf-co24-1-2_6 | The “confusion of tongues” theory of Sándor Ferenczi was inspired by this thinker’s “seduction theory,” which held that childhood abuse caused hysteria. | [
"Sigmund Freud"
] | acf-co24-1-2 | 6 | A “Copernican revolution” begun by this thinker inspired a follower to explain how part of the self is “maintained in its radical alterity by the other person.” A theory from this thinker was explained in terms of “enigmatic signifiers” by a scholar who often worked with Jean-Bertrand Pontalis. Max Schur examined the guilt experienced by this thinker after botched surgery conducted by a friend left gauze in Emma Eckstein’s nose. In The Assault on Truth, Jeffrey Masson cites this thinker’s letters to Wilhelm Fliess to explain why this thinker abandoned one theory. This thinker inspired a Hungarian scholar to contrast tender children with the passionate talk they hear. The “confusion of tongues” theory of Sándor Ferenczi was inspired by this thinker’s “seduction theory,” which held that childhood abuse caused hysteria. For 10 points, name this thinker who analyzed his own dream of Irma being given an injection. | Sigmund Freud | [
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"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
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acf-co24-1-2_7 | For 10 points, name this thinker who analyzed his own dream of Irma being given an injection. | [
"Sigmund Freud"
] | acf-co24-1-2 | 7 | A “Copernican revolution” begun by this thinker inspired a follower to explain how part of the self is “maintained in its radical alterity by the other person.” A theory from this thinker was explained in terms of “enigmatic signifiers” by a scholar who often worked with Jean-Bertrand Pontalis. Max Schur examined the guilt experienced by this thinker after botched surgery conducted by a friend left gauze in Emma Eckstein’s nose. In The Assault on Truth, Jeffrey Masson cites this thinker’s letters to Wilhelm Fliess to explain why this thinker abandoned one theory. This thinker inspired a Hungarian scholar to contrast tender children with the passionate talk they hear. The “confusion of tongues” theory of Sándor Ferenczi was inspired by this thinker’s “seduction theory,” which held that childhood abuse caused hysteria. For 10 points, name this thinker who analyzed his own dream of Irma being given an injection. | Sigmund Freud | [
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0,
160
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161,
295
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[
296,
432
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433,
570
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[
571,
676
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[
677,
829
],
[
830,
923
]
] | {
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"category_full": "Social Science - Social Science",
"category_main": "social-science",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"social-science"
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acf-co24-1-3_1 | A 2016 paper by Ueno et al. titled “Extreme-scale [this algorithm] on supercomputers” improves upon Beamer’s direction-optimized “hybrid” variant of this algorithm, which has been used by Riken’s Fugaku to consistently achieve top GTEPS benchmark rankings. | [
"breadth-first search",
"BFS"
] | acf-co24-1-3 | 1 | A 2016 paper by Ueno et al. titled “Extreme-scale [this algorithm] on supercomputers” improves upon Beamer’s direction-optimized “hybrid” variant of this algorithm, which has been used by Riken’s Fugaku to consistently achieve top GTEPS benchmark rankings. This algorithm forms the basis of Lee’s and Hadlock’s algorithms used in ECAD software. It’s not related to the knapsack problem, but the zero–one variant of this algorithm may be used to solve restricted cases of the SSSP problem in “big-O of E” time. The Edmonds–Karp algorithm specifies that this algorithm be used to locate augmenting paths. Level-order traversal of binary trees is typically implemented using this algorithm, which, unlike a related algorithm, is complete and uses a queue to store explored nodes. For 10 points, name this search algorithm contrasted with a depth-first counterpart. | breadth-first search [or BFS; prompt on search until read] | [
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"category_main": "other-science-(computer-science)",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-science-(computer-science)"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-3_2 | This algorithm forms the basis of Lee’s and Hadlock’s algorithms used in ECAD software. | [
"breadth-first search",
"BFS"
] | acf-co24-1-3 | 2 | A 2016 paper by Ueno et al. titled “Extreme-scale [this algorithm] on supercomputers” improves upon Beamer’s direction-optimized “hybrid” variant of this algorithm, which has been used by Riken’s Fugaku to consistently achieve top GTEPS benchmark rankings. This algorithm forms the basis of Lee’s and Hadlock’s algorithms used in ECAD software. It’s not related to the knapsack problem, but the zero–one variant of this algorithm may be used to solve restricted cases of the SSSP problem in “big-O of E” time. The Edmonds–Karp algorithm specifies that this algorithm be used to locate augmenting paths. Level-order traversal of binary trees is typically implemented using this algorithm, which, unlike a related algorithm, is complete and uses a queue to store explored nodes. For 10 points, name this search algorithm contrasted with a depth-first counterpart. | breadth-first search [or BFS; prompt on search until read] | [
[
0,
256
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[
257,
344
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[
345,
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[
511,
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[
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"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-science-(computer-science)"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-3_3 | It’s not related to the knapsack problem, but the zero–one variant of this algorithm may be used to solve restricted cases of the SSSP problem in “big-O of E” time. | [
"breadth-first search",
"BFS"
] | acf-co24-1-3 | 3 | A 2016 paper by Ueno et al. titled “Extreme-scale [this algorithm] on supercomputers” improves upon Beamer’s direction-optimized “hybrid” variant of this algorithm, which has been used by Riken’s Fugaku to consistently achieve top GTEPS benchmark rankings. This algorithm forms the basis of Lee’s and Hadlock’s algorithms used in ECAD software. It’s not related to the knapsack problem, but the zero–one variant of this algorithm may be used to solve restricted cases of the SSSP problem in “big-O of E” time. The Edmonds–Karp algorithm specifies that this algorithm be used to locate augmenting paths. Level-order traversal of binary trees is typically implemented using this algorithm, which, unlike a related algorithm, is complete and uses a queue to store explored nodes. For 10 points, name this search algorithm contrasted with a depth-first counterpart. | breadth-first search [or BFS; prompt on search until read] | [
[
0,
256
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[
257,
344
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[
345,
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[
511,
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[
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"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-science-(computer-science)"
]
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acf-co24-1-3_4 | The Edmonds–Karp algorithm specifies that this algorithm be used to locate augmenting paths. | [
"breadth-first search",
"BFS"
] | acf-co24-1-3 | 4 | A 2016 paper by Ueno et al. titled “Extreme-scale [this algorithm] on supercomputers” improves upon Beamer’s direction-optimized “hybrid” variant of this algorithm, which has been used by Riken’s Fugaku to consistently achieve top GTEPS benchmark rankings. This algorithm forms the basis of Lee’s and Hadlock’s algorithms used in ECAD software. It’s not related to the knapsack problem, but the zero–one variant of this algorithm may be used to solve restricted cases of the SSSP problem in “big-O of E” time. The Edmonds–Karp algorithm specifies that this algorithm be used to locate augmenting paths. Level-order traversal of binary trees is typically implemented using this algorithm, which, unlike a related algorithm, is complete and uses a queue to store explored nodes. For 10 points, name this search algorithm contrasted with a depth-first counterpart. | breadth-first search [or BFS; prompt on search until read] | [
[
0,
256
],
[
257,
344
],
[
345,
510
],
[
511,
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],
[
604,
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[
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]
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"category": "other-science-(computer-science)",
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"category_main": "other-science-(computer-science)",
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"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-science-(computer-science)"
]
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acf-co24-1-3_5 | Level-order traversal of binary trees is typically implemented using this algorithm, which, unlike a related algorithm, is complete and uses a queue to store explored nodes. | [
"breadth-first search",
"BFS"
] | acf-co24-1-3 | 5 | A 2016 paper by Ueno et al. titled “Extreme-scale [this algorithm] on supercomputers” improves upon Beamer’s direction-optimized “hybrid” variant of this algorithm, which has been used by Riken’s Fugaku to consistently achieve top GTEPS benchmark rankings. This algorithm forms the basis of Lee’s and Hadlock’s algorithms used in ECAD software. It’s not related to the knapsack problem, but the zero–one variant of this algorithm may be used to solve restricted cases of the SSSP problem in “big-O of E” time. The Edmonds–Karp algorithm specifies that this algorithm be used to locate augmenting paths. Level-order traversal of binary trees is typically implemented using this algorithm, which, unlike a related algorithm, is complete and uses a queue to store explored nodes. For 10 points, name this search algorithm contrasted with a depth-first counterpart. | breadth-first search [or BFS; prompt on search until read] | [
[
0,
256
],
[
257,
344
],
[
345,
510
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[
511,
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[
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"category_main": "other-science-(computer-science)",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-science-(computer-science)"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-3_6 | For 10 points, name this search algorithm contrasted with a depth-first counterpart. | [
"breadth-first search",
"BFS"
] | acf-co24-1-3 | 6 | A 2016 paper by Ueno et al. titled “Extreme-scale [this algorithm] on supercomputers” improves upon Beamer’s direction-optimized “hybrid” variant of this algorithm, which has been used by Riken’s Fugaku to consistently achieve top GTEPS benchmark rankings. This algorithm forms the basis of Lee’s and Hadlock’s algorithms used in ECAD software. It’s not related to the knapsack problem, but the zero–one variant of this algorithm may be used to solve restricted cases of the SSSP problem in “big-O of E” time. The Edmonds–Karp algorithm specifies that this algorithm be used to locate augmenting paths. Level-order traversal of binary trees is typically implemented using this algorithm, which, unlike a related algorithm, is complete and uses a queue to store explored nodes. For 10 points, name this search algorithm contrasted with a depth-first counterpart. | breadth-first search [or BFS; prompt on search until read] | [
[
0,
256
],
[
257,
344
],
[
345,
510
],
[
511,
603
],
[
604,
777
],
[
778,
862
]
] | {
"category": "other-science-(computer-science)",
"category_full": "Other Science (Computer Science) - Other Science (Computer Science)",
"category_main": "other-science-(computer-science)",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-science-(computer-science)"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-4_1 | Nathaniel Deutsch debunked a book claiming that this historical political territory was annually traversed in a triangular migration by a “tri-racial” group partly composed of Fulani pastoralists, the Ben-Ishmael tribe. | [
"Northwest Territory",
"Northwestern University",
"Northwest Ordinance",
"Old Northwest"
] | acf-co24-1-4 | 1 | Nathaniel Deutsch debunked a book claiming that this historical political territory was annually traversed in a triangular migration by a “tri-racial” group partly composed of Fulani pastoralists, the Ben-Ishmael tribe. This territory was seen as a testing ground for “ward republics” by a man who wanted to divide it into areas like Assenisipia and Metropotamia. Zane’s Trace cut through this territory, where the “French 500” arrived to settle Gallipolis after William Duer sold them worthless deeds. A university named for this territory created the title Dean of Women for the “do everything” activist Frances Willard. This territory was established by the successor to an act that created a survey system based on 6-mile-wide grids called townships. For 10 points, the formation of states in what territory was governed by a namesake act passed after Thomas Jefferson’s Land Ordinance? | Northwest Territory [or Old Northwest; accept Northwest Ordinance or Northwestern University; prompt on Ohio Lands or Indiana Territory by asking “what territory was that part of during the events clued?”; reject “Northwest Territories”] (The Ishmael family was cast as an Islamic “Fugitive ‘Nation’ of the Old Northwest” in a book by Hugo Prosper Leaming.) | [
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"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"american-history"
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acf-co24-1-4_2 | This territory was seen as a testing ground for “ward republics” by a man who wanted to divide it into areas like Assenisipia and Metropotamia. | [
"Northwest Territory",
"Northwestern University",
"Northwest Ordinance",
"Old Northwest"
] | acf-co24-1-4 | 2 | Nathaniel Deutsch debunked a book claiming that this historical political territory was annually traversed in a triangular migration by a “tri-racial” group partly composed of Fulani pastoralists, the Ben-Ishmael tribe. This territory was seen as a testing ground for “ward republics” by a man who wanted to divide it into areas like Assenisipia and Metropotamia. Zane’s Trace cut through this territory, where the “French 500” arrived to settle Gallipolis after William Duer sold them worthless deeds. A university named for this territory created the title Dean of Women for the “do everything” activist Frances Willard. This territory was established by the successor to an act that created a survey system based on 6-mile-wide grids called townships. For 10 points, the formation of states in what territory was governed by a namesake act passed after Thomas Jefferson’s Land Ordinance? | Northwest Territory [or Old Northwest; accept Northwest Ordinance or Northwestern University; prompt on Ohio Lands or Indiana Territory by asking “what territory was that part of during the events clued?”; reject “Northwest Territories”] (The Ishmael family was cast as an Islamic “Fugitive ‘Nation’ of the Old Northwest” in a book by Hugo Prosper Leaming.) | [
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"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"american-history"
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} |
acf-co24-1-4_3 | Zane’s Trace cut through this territory, where the “French 500” arrived to settle Gallipolis after William Duer sold them worthless deeds. | [
"Northwest Territory",
"Northwestern University",
"Northwest Ordinance",
"Old Northwest"
] | acf-co24-1-4 | 3 | Nathaniel Deutsch debunked a book claiming that this historical political territory was annually traversed in a triangular migration by a “tri-racial” group partly composed of Fulani pastoralists, the Ben-Ishmael tribe. This territory was seen as a testing ground for “ward republics” by a man who wanted to divide it into areas like Assenisipia and Metropotamia. Zane’s Trace cut through this territory, where the “French 500” arrived to settle Gallipolis after William Duer sold them worthless deeds. A university named for this territory created the title Dean of Women for the “do everything” activist Frances Willard. This territory was established by the successor to an act that created a survey system based on 6-mile-wide grids called townships. For 10 points, the formation of states in what territory was governed by a namesake act passed after Thomas Jefferson’s Land Ordinance? | Northwest Territory [or Old Northwest; accept Northwest Ordinance or Northwestern University; prompt on Ohio Lands or Indiana Territory by asking “what territory was that part of during the events clued?”; reject “Northwest Territories”] (The Ishmael family was cast as an Islamic “Fugitive ‘Nation’ of the Old Northwest” in a book by Hugo Prosper Leaming.) | [
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"subcategory": [
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acf-co24-1-4_4 | A university named for this territory created the title Dean of Women for the “do everything” activist Frances Willard. | [
"Northwest Territory",
"Northwestern University",
"Northwest Ordinance",
"Old Northwest"
] | acf-co24-1-4 | 4 | Nathaniel Deutsch debunked a book claiming that this historical political territory was annually traversed in a triangular migration by a “tri-racial” group partly composed of Fulani pastoralists, the Ben-Ishmael tribe. This territory was seen as a testing ground for “ward republics” by a man who wanted to divide it into areas like Assenisipia and Metropotamia. Zane’s Trace cut through this territory, where the “French 500” arrived to settle Gallipolis after William Duer sold them worthless deeds. A university named for this territory created the title Dean of Women for the “do everything” activist Frances Willard. This territory was established by the successor to an act that created a survey system based on 6-mile-wide grids called townships. For 10 points, the formation of states in what territory was governed by a namesake act passed after Thomas Jefferson’s Land Ordinance? | Northwest Territory [or Old Northwest; accept Northwest Ordinance or Northwestern University; prompt on Ohio Lands or Indiana Territory by asking “what territory was that part of during the events clued?”; reject “Northwest Territories”] (The Ishmael family was cast as an Islamic “Fugitive ‘Nation’ of the Old Northwest” in a book by Hugo Prosper Leaming.) | [
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"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
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acf-co24-1-4_5 | This territory was established by the successor to an act that created a survey system based on 6-mile-wide grids called townships. | [
"Northwest Territory",
"Northwestern University",
"Northwest Ordinance",
"Old Northwest"
] | acf-co24-1-4 | 5 | Nathaniel Deutsch debunked a book claiming that this historical political territory was annually traversed in a triangular migration by a “tri-racial” group partly composed of Fulani pastoralists, the Ben-Ishmael tribe. This territory was seen as a testing ground for “ward republics” by a man who wanted to divide it into areas like Assenisipia and Metropotamia. Zane’s Trace cut through this territory, where the “French 500” arrived to settle Gallipolis after William Duer sold them worthless deeds. A university named for this territory created the title Dean of Women for the “do everything” activist Frances Willard. This territory was established by the successor to an act that created a survey system based on 6-mile-wide grids called townships. For 10 points, the formation of states in what territory was governed by a namesake act passed after Thomas Jefferson’s Land Ordinance? | Northwest Territory [or Old Northwest; accept Northwest Ordinance or Northwestern University; prompt on Ohio Lands or Indiana Territory by asking “what territory was that part of during the events clued?”; reject “Northwest Territories”] (The Ishmael family was cast as an Islamic “Fugitive ‘Nation’ of the Old Northwest” in a book by Hugo Prosper Leaming.) | [
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891
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"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"american-history"
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acf-co24-1-4_6 | For 10 points, the formation of states in what territory was governed by a namesake act passed after Thomas Jefferson’s Land Ordinance? | [
"Northwest Territory",
"Northwestern University",
"Northwest Ordinance",
"Old Northwest"
] | acf-co24-1-4 | 6 | Nathaniel Deutsch debunked a book claiming that this historical political territory was annually traversed in a triangular migration by a “tri-racial” group partly composed of Fulani pastoralists, the Ben-Ishmael tribe. This territory was seen as a testing ground for “ward republics” by a man who wanted to divide it into areas like Assenisipia and Metropotamia. Zane’s Trace cut through this territory, where the “French 500” arrived to settle Gallipolis after William Duer sold them worthless deeds. A university named for this territory created the title Dean of Women for the “do everything” activist Frances Willard. This territory was established by the successor to an act that created a survey system based on 6-mile-wide grids called townships. For 10 points, the formation of states in what territory was governed by a namesake act passed after Thomas Jefferson’s Land Ordinance? | Northwest Territory [or Old Northwest; accept Northwest Ordinance or Northwestern University; prompt on Ohio Lands or Indiana Territory by asking “what territory was that part of during the events clued?”; reject “Northwest Territories”] (The Ishmael family was cast as an Islamic “Fugitive ‘Nation’ of the Old Northwest” in a book by Hugo Prosper Leaming.) | [
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acf-co24-1-5_1 | This activity is depicted on the second card of a Floskaartjes deck, before 34 cards representing social roles. | [
"blowing soap bubbles",
"blowing bubbles",
"making bubbles"
] | acf-co24-1-5 | 1 | This activity is depicted on the second card of a Floskaartjes deck, before 34 cards representing social roles. A “set” for doing this activity was placed beside a lunar map and an egg in the first shadow box by Joseph Cornell. In “The Primacy of Absorption,” Michael Fried points out a torn jacket in a painting of a person performing this activity. This activity is shown in a painting that John Everett Millais used to advertise the company Pears. Manet painted teenage Léon Leenhoff doing this activity while holding a bowl. This activity symbolized impermanence in the homo bulla motif of 17th-century Dutch painting. Unlike a painting in which a house of cards is being built, another painting by the same artist shows a young man using a straw to do this action. For 10 points, Chardin painted a young man leaning out of a window while doing what action? | blowing bubbles [or blowing soap bubbles; accept making bubbles] (Life of Man is by Jan Steen.) | [
[
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[
112,
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623
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"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
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acf-co24-1-5_2 | A “set” for doing this activity was placed beside a lunar map and an egg in the first shadow box by Joseph Cornell. | [
"blowing soap bubbles",
"blowing bubbles",
"making bubbles"
] | acf-co24-1-5 | 2 | This activity is depicted on the second card of a Floskaartjes deck, before 34 cards representing social roles. A “set” for doing this activity was placed beside a lunar map and an egg in the first shadow box by Joseph Cornell. In “The Primacy of Absorption,” Michael Fried points out a torn jacket in a painting of a person performing this activity. This activity is shown in a painting that John Everett Millais used to advertise the company Pears. Manet painted teenage Léon Leenhoff doing this activity while holding a bowl. This activity symbolized impermanence in the homo bulla motif of 17th-century Dutch painting. Unlike a painting in which a house of cards is being built, another painting by the same artist shows a young man using a straw to do this action. For 10 points, Chardin painted a young man leaning out of a window while doing what action? | blowing bubbles [or blowing soap bubbles; accept making bubbles] (Life of Man is by Jan Steen.) | [
[
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111
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[
112,
227
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228,
350
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[
452,
529
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[
530,
623
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[
624,
770
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771,
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"category_main": "fine-arts-painting-and-sculpture",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
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} |
acf-co24-1-5_3 | In “The Primacy of Absorption,” Michael Fried points out a torn jacket in a painting of a person performing this activity. | [
"blowing soap bubbles",
"blowing bubbles",
"making bubbles"
] | acf-co24-1-5 | 3 | This activity is depicted on the second card of a Floskaartjes deck, before 34 cards representing social roles. A “set” for doing this activity was placed beside a lunar map and an egg in the first shadow box by Joseph Cornell. In “The Primacy of Absorption,” Michael Fried points out a torn jacket in a painting of a person performing this activity. This activity is shown in a painting that John Everett Millais used to advertise the company Pears. Manet painted teenage Léon Leenhoff doing this activity while holding a bowl. This activity symbolized impermanence in the homo bulla motif of 17th-century Dutch painting. Unlike a painting in which a house of cards is being built, another painting by the same artist shows a young man using a straw to do this action. For 10 points, Chardin painted a young man leaning out of a window while doing what action? | blowing bubbles [or blowing soap bubbles; accept making bubbles] (Life of Man is by Jan Steen.) | [
[
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111
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[
112,
227
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[
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530,
623
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[
624,
770
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[
771,
862
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] | {
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"category_main": "fine-arts-painting-and-sculpture",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
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acf-co24-1-5_4 | This activity is shown in a painting that John Everett Millais used to advertise the company Pears. | [
"blowing soap bubbles",
"blowing bubbles",
"making bubbles"
] | acf-co24-1-5 | 4 | This activity is depicted on the second card of a Floskaartjes deck, before 34 cards representing social roles. A “set” for doing this activity was placed beside a lunar map and an egg in the first shadow box by Joseph Cornell. In “The Primacy of Absorption,” Michael Fried points out a torn jacket in a painting of a person performing this activity. This activity is shown in a painting that John Everett Millais used to advertise the company Pears. Manet painted teenage Léon Leenhoff doing this activity while holding a bowl. This activity symbolized impermanence in the homo bulla motif of 17th-century Dutch painting. Unlike a painting in which a house of cards is being built, another painting by the same artist shows a young man using a straw to do this action. For 10 points, Chardin painted a young man leaning out of a window while doing what action? | blowing bubbles [or blowing soap bubbles; accept making bubbles] (Life of Man is by Jan Steen.) | [
[
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111
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[
112,
227
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[
530,
623
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[
624,
770
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771,
862
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"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
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acf-co24-1-5_5 | Manet painted teenage Léon Leenhoff doing this activity while holding a bowl. | [
"blowing soap bubbles",
"blowing bubbles",
"making bubbles"
] | acf-co24-1-5 | 5 | This activity is depicted on the second card of a Floskaartjes deck, before 34 cards representing social roles. A “set” for doing this activity was placed beside a lunar map and an egg in the first shadow box by Joseph Cornell. In “The Primacy of Absorption,” Michael Fried points out a torn jacket in a painting of a person performing this activity. This activity is shown in a painting that John Everett Millais used to advertise the company Pears. Manet painted teenage Léon Leenhoff doing this activity while holding a bowl. This activity symbolized impermanence in the homo bulla motif of 17th-century Dutch painting. Unlike a painting in which a house of cards is being built, another painting by the same artist shows a young man using a straw to do this action. For 10 points, Chardin painted a young man leaning out of a window while doing what action? | blowing bubbles [or blowing soap bubbles; accept making bubbles] (Life of Man is by Jan Steen.) | [
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"category": "fine-arts",
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"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"painting-and-sculpture"
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} |
acf-co24-1-5_6 | This activity symbolized impermanence in the homo bulla motif of 17th-century Dutch painting. | [
"blowing soap bubbles",
"blowing bubbles",
"making bubbles"
] | acf-co24-1-5 | 6 | This activity is depicted on the second card of a Floskaartjes deck, before 34 cards representing social roles. A “set” for doing this activity was placed beside a lunar map and an egg in the first shadow box by Joseph Cornell. In “The Primacy of Absorption,” Michael Fried points out a torn jacket in a painting of a person performing this activity. This activity is shown in a painting that John Everett Millais used to advertise the company Pears. Manet painted teenage Léon Leenhoff doing this activity while holding a bowl. This activity symbolized impermanence in the homo bulla motif of 17th-century Dutch painting. Unlike a painting in which a house of cards is being built, another painting by the same artist shows a young man using a straw to do this action. For 10 points, Chardin painted a young man leaning out of a window while doing what action? | blowing bubbles [or blowing soap bubbles; accept making bubbles] (Life of Man is by Jan Steen.) | [
[
0,
111
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[
112,
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"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"painting-and-sculpture"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-5_7 | Unlike a painting in which a house of cards is being built, another painting by the same artist shows a young man using a straw to do this action. | [
"blowing soap bubbles",
"blowing bubbles",
"making bubbles"
] | acf-co24-1-5 | 7 | This activity is depicted on the second card of a Floskaartjes deck, before 34 cards representing social roles. A “set” for doing this activity was placed beside a lunar map and an egg in the first shadow box by Joseph Cornell. In “The Primacy of Absorption,” Michael Fried points out a torn jacket in a painting of a person performing this activity. This activity is shown in a painting that John Everett Millais used to advertise the company Pears. Manet painted teenage Léon Leenhoff doing this activity while holding a bowl. This activity symbolized impermanence in the homo bulla motif of 17th-century Dutch painting. Unlike a painting in which a house of cards is being built, another painting by the same artist shows a young man using a straw to do this action. For 10 points, Chardin painted a young man leaning out of a window while doing what action? | blowing bubbles [or blowing soap bubbles; accept making bubbles] (Life of Man is by Jan Steen.) | [
[
0,
111
],
[
112,
227
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[
228,
350
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[
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],
[
452,
529
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[
530,
623
],
[
624,
770
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[
771,
862
]
] | {
"category": "fine-arts",
"category_full": "Fine Arts - Painting and Sculpture",
"category_main": "fine-arts-painting-and-sculpture",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"painting-and-sculpture"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-5_8 | For 10 points, Chardin painted a young man leaning out of a window while doing what action? | [
"blowing soap bubbles",
"blowing bubbles",
"making bubbles"
] | acf-co24-1-5 | 8 | This activity is depicted on the second card of a Floskaartjes deck, before 34 cards representing social roles. A “set” for doing this activity was placed beside a lunar map and an egg in the first shadow box by Joseph Cornell. In “The Primacy of Absorption,” Michael Fried points out a torn jacket in a painting of a person performing this activity. This activity is shown in a painting that John Everett Millais used to advertise the company Pears. Manet painted teenage Léon Leenhoff doing this activity while holding a bowl. This activity symbolized impermanence in the homo bulla motif of 17th-century Dutch painting. Unlike a painting in which a house of cards is being built, another painting by the same artist shows a young man using a straw to do this action. For 10 points, Chardin painted a young man leaning out of a window while doing what action? | blowing bubbles [or blowing soap bubbles; accept making bubbles] (Life of Man is by Jan Steen.) | [
[
0,
111
],
[
112,
227
],
[
228,
350
],
[
351,
451
],
[
452,
529
],
[
530,
623
],
[
624,
770
],
[
771,
862
]
] | {
"category": "fine-arts",
"category_full": "Fine Arts - Painting and Sculpture",
"category_main": "fine-arts-painting-and-sculpture",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"painting-and-sculpture"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-6_1 | The image of a crushed frog on a road recurs in a novel titled for this practice that begins by interlacing an account of a boy drawing a seagull with excruciatingly detailed descriptions of a ferry docking at an island. | [
"The Voyeur",
"any answer describing the practice of watching others have sex",
"Le Voyeur",
"voyeurism"
] | acf-co24-1-6 | 1 | The image of a crushed frog on a road recurs in a novel titled for this practice that begins by interlacing an account of a boy drawing a seagull with excruciatingly detailed descriptions of a ferry docking at an island. The narrator engages in this practice in Madame Lemercier’s boarding-house in Henri Barbusse’s novel Hell. The title character begins engaging in this practice in a rye field behind the Forest Hotel ten years after attending a ball in Town Beach at which her fiancé Michael left her for Anne-Marie Stretter in The Ravishing of Lol Stein by Marguerite Duras. A novel titled for a performer of this practice never makes clear whether the traveling watch salesman Mathias actually murdered the 13-year-old Jacqueline Leduc. For 10 points, name this sexual practice that titles a pioneering nouveau roman by Alain Robbe-Grillet. | voyeurism [accept The Voyeur or Le Voyeur; accept any answer describing the practice of watching others have sex; prompt on watching, looking, spying, or equivalents] | [
[
0,
220
],
[
221,
327
],
[
328,
579
],
[
580,
742
],
[
743,
846
]
] | {
"category": "literature",
"category_full": "Literature - European Literature",
"category_main": "literature-european-literature",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"european-literature"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-6_2 | The narrator engages in this practice in Madame Lemercier’s boarding-house in Henri Barbusse’s novel Hell. | [
"The Voyeur",
"any answer describing the practice of watching others have sex",
"Le Voyeur",
"voyeurism"
] | acf-co24-1-6 | 2 | The image of a crushed frog on a road recurs in a novel titled for this practice that begins by interlacing an account of a boy drawing a seagull with excruciatingly detailed descriptions of a ferry docking at an island. The narrator engages in this practice in Madame Lemercier’s boarding-house in Henri Barbusse’s novel Hell. The title character begins engaging in this practice in a rye field behind the Forest Hotel ten years after attending a ball in Town Beach at which her fiancé Michael left her for Anne-Marie Stretter in The Ravishing of Lol Stein by Marguerite Duras. A novel titled for a performer of this practice never makes clear whether the traveling watch salesman Mathias actually murdered the 13-year-old Jacqueline Leduc. For 10 points, name this sexual practice that titles a pioneering nouveau roman by Alain Robbe-Grillet. | voyeurism [accept The Voyeur or Le Voyeur; accept any answer describing the practice of watching others have sex; prompt on watching, looking, spying, or equivalents] | [
[
0,
220
],
[
221,
327
],
[
328,
579
],
[
580,
742
],
[
743,
846
]
] | {
"category": "literature",
"category_full": "Literature - European Literature",
"category_main": "literature-european-literature",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"european-literature"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-6_3 | The title character begins engaging in this practice in a rye field behind the Forest Hotel ten years after attending a ball in Town Beach at which her fiancé Michael left her for Anne-Marie Stretter in The Ravishing of Lol Stein by Marguerite Duras. | [
"The Voyeur",
"any answer describing the practice of watching others have sex",
"Le Voyeur",
"voyeurism"
] | acf-co24-1-6 | 3 | The image of a crushed frog on a road recurs in a novel titled for this practice that begins by interlacing an account of a boy drawing a seagull with excruciatingly detailed descriptions of a ferry docking at an island. The narrator engages in this practice in Madame Lemercier’s boarding-house in Henri Barbusse’s novel Hell. The title character begins engaging in this practice in a rye field behind the Forest Hotel ten years after attending a ball in Town Beach at which her fiancé Michael left her for Anne-Marie Stretter in The Ravishing of Lol Stein by Marguerite Duras. A novel titled for a performer of this practice never makes clear whether the traveling watch salesman Mathias actually murdered the 13-year-old Jacqueline Leduc. For 10 points, name this sexual practice that titles a pioneering nouveau roman by Alain Robbe-Grillet. | voyeurism [accept The Voyeur or Le Voyeur; accept any answer describing the practice of watching others have sex; prompt on watching, looking, spying, or equivalents] | [
[
0,
220
],
[
221,
327
],
[
328,
579
],
[
580,
742
],
[
743,
846
]
] | {
"category": "literature",
"category_full": "Literature - European Literature",
"category_main": "literature-european-literature",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"european-literature"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-6_4 | A novel titled for a performer of this practice never makes clear whether the traveling watch salesman Mathias actually murdered the 13-year-old Jacqueline Leduc. | [
"The Voyeur",
"any answer describing the practice of watching others have sex",
"Le Voyeur",
"voyeurism"
] | acf-co24-1-6 | 4 | The image of a crushed frog on a road recurs in a novel titled for this practice that begins by interlacing an account of a boy drawing a seagull with excruciatingly detailed descriptions of a ferry docking at an island. The narrator engages in this practice in Madame Lemercier’s boarding-house in Henri Barbusse’s novel Hell. The title character begins engaging in this practice in a rye field behind the Forest Hotel ten years after attending a ball in Town Beach at which her fiancé Michael left her for Anne-Marie Stretter in The Ravishing of Lol Stein by Marguerite Duras. A novel titled for a performer of this practice never makes clear whether the traveling watch salesman Mathias actually murdered the 13-year-old Jacqueline Leduc. For 10 points, name this sexual practice that titles a pioneering nouveau roman by Alain Robbe-Grillet. | voyeurism [accept The Voyeur or Le Voyeur; accept any answer describing the practice of watching others have sex; prompt on watching, looking, spying, or equivalents] | [
[
0,
220
],
[
221,
327
],
[
328,
579
],
[
580,
742
],
[
743,
846
]
] | {
"category": "literature",
"category_full": "Literature - European Literature",
"category_main": "literature-european-literature",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"european-literature"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-6_5 | For 10 points, name this sexual practice that titles a pioneering nouveau roman by Alain Robbe-Grillet. | [
"The Voyeur",
"any answer describing the practice of watching others have sex",
"Le Voyeur",
"voyeurism"
] | acf-co24-1-6 | 5 | The image of a crushed frog on a road recurs in a novel titled for this practice that begins by interlacing an account of a boy drawing a seagull with excruciatingly detailed descriptions of a ferry docking at an island. The narrator engages in this practice in Madame Lemercier’s boarding-house in Henri Barbusse’s novel Hell. The title character begins engaging in this practice in a rye field behind the Forest Hotel ten years after attending a ball in Town Beach at which her fiancé Michael left her for Anne-Marie Stretter in The Ravishing of Lol Stein by Marguerite Duras. A novel titled for a performer of this practice never makes clear whether the traveling watch salesman Mathias actually murdered the 13-year-old Jacqueline Leduc. For 10 points, name this sexual practice that titles a pioneering nouveau roman by Alain Robbe-Grillet. | voyeurism [accept The Voyeur or Le Voyeur; accept any answer describing the practice of watching others have sex; prompt on watching, looking, spying, or equivalents] | [
[
0,
220
],
[
221,
327
],
[
328,
579
],
[
580,
742
],
[
743,
846
]
] | {
"category": "literature",
"category_full": "Literature - European Literature",
"category_main": "literature-european-literature",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"european-literature"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-7_1 | In 2015, Strominger et al. showed that a result named for these particles was a Ward identity of certain BMS supertranslations. | [
"gravitons"
] | acf-co24-1-7 | 1 | In 2015, Strominger et al. showed that a result named for these particles was a Ward identity of certain BMS supertranslations. They’re not photons, but the change in the S matrix when a zero momentum one of these particles is added to a vertex is given by that result, which is Weinberg’s theorem on the “soft” examples of these particles. Two-loop Feynman diagrams of interactions between these particles lead to ultraviolet divergence, but one-loop diagrams are finite due to a Gauss–Bonnet counterterm. The self-interaction of these particles reproduces an action proportional to “square root of negative det g.” These particles are coupled to the stress–energy tensor and hence are only radiated by quadrupole sources. These particles correspond to quantization of the Einstein–Hilbert action. For 10 points, name these spin-2 massless particles that mediate the weakest fundamental force. | gravitons | [
[
0,
127
],
[
128,
340
],
[
341,
507
],
[
508,
617
],
[
618,
724
],
[
725,
799
],
[
800,
895
]
] | {
"category": "science",
"category_full": "Science - Physics",
"category_main": "science-physics",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"physics"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-7_2 | They’re not photons, but the change in the S matrix when a zero momentum one of these particles is added to a vertex is given by that result, which is Weinberg’s theorem on the “soft” examples of these particles. | [
"gravitons"
] | acf-co24-1-7 | 2 | In 2015, Strominger et al. showed that a result named for these particles was a Ward identity of certain BMS supertranslations. They’re not photons, but the change in the S matrix when a zero momentum one of these particles is added to a vertex is given by that result, which is Weinberg’s theorem on the “soft” examples of these particles. Two-loop Feynman diagrams of interactions between these particles lead to ultraviolet divergence, but one-loop diagrams are finite due to a Gauss–Bonnet counterterm. The self-interaction of these particles reproduces an action proportional to “square root of negative det g.” These particles are coupled to the stress–energy tensor and hence are only radiated by quadrupole sources. These particles correspond to quantization of the Einstein–Hilbert action. For 10 points, name these spin-2 massless particles that mediate the weakest fundamental force. | gravitons | [
[
0,
127
],
[
128,
340
],
[
341,
507
],
[
508,
617
],
[
618,
724
],
[
725,
799
],
[
800,
895
]
] | {
"category": "science",
"category_full": "Science - Physics",
"category_main": "science-physics",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"physics"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-7_3 | Two-loop Feynman diagrams of interactions between these particles lead to ultraviolet divergence, but one-loop diagrams are finite due to a Gauss–Bonnet counterterm. | [
"gravitons"
] | acf-co24-1-7 | 3 | In 2015, Strominger et al. showed that a result named for these particles was a Ward identity of certain BMS supertranslations. They’re not photons, but the change in the S matrix when a zero momentum one of these particles is added to a vertex is given by that result, which is Weinberg’s theorem on the “soft” examples of these particles. Two-loop Feynman diagrams of interactions between these particles lead to ultraviolet divergence, but one-loop diagrams are finite due to a Gauss–Bonnet counterterm. The self-interaction of these particles reproduces an action proportional to “square root of negative det g.” These particles are coupled to the stress–energy tensor and hence are only radiated by quadrupole sources. These particles correspond to quantization of the Einstein–Hilbert action. For 10 points, name these spin-2 massless particles that mediate the weakest fundamental force. | gravitons | [
[
0,
127
],
[
128,
340
],
[
341,
507
],
[
508,
617
],
[
618,
724
],
[
725,
799
],
[
800,
895
]
] | {
"category": "science",
"category_full": "Science - Physics",
"category_main": "science-physics",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"physics"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-7_4 | The self-interaction of these particles reproduces an action proportional to “square root of negative det g.” | [
"gravitons"
] | acf-co24-1-7 | 4 | In 2015, Strominger et al. showed that a result named for these particles was a Ward identity of certain BMS supertranslations. They’re not photons, but the change in the S matrix when a zero momentum one of these particles is added to a vertex is given by that result, which is Weinberg’s theorem on the “soft” examples of these particles. Two-loop Feynman diagrams of interactions between these particles lead to ultraviolet divergence, but one-loop diagrams are finite due to a Gauss–Bonnet counterterm. The self-interaction of these particles reproduces an action proportional to “square root of negative det g.” These particles are coupled to the stress–energy tensor and hence are only radiated by quadrupole sources. These particles correspond to quantization of the Einstein–Hilbert action. For 10 points, name these spin-2 massless particles that mediate the weakest fundamental force. | gravitons | [
[
0,
127
],
[
128,
340
],
[
341,
507
],
[
508,
617
],
[
618,
724
],
[
725,
799
],
[
800,
895
]
] | {
"category": "science",
"category_full": "Science - Physics",
"category_main": "science-physics",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"physics"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-7_5 | These particles are coupled to the stress–energy tensor and hence are only radiated by quadrupole sources. | [
"gravitons"
] | acf-co24-1-7 | 5 | In 2015, Strominger et al. showed that a result named for these particles was a Ward identity of certain BMS supertranslations. They’re not photons, but the change in the S matrix when a zero momentum one of these particles is added to a vertex is given by that result, which is Weinberg’s theorem on the “soft” examples of these particles. Two-loop Feynman diagrams of interactions between these particles lead to ultraviolet divergence, but one-loop diagrams are finite due to a Gauss–Bonnet counterterm. The self-interaction of these particles reproduces an action proportional to “square root of negative det g.” These particles are coupled to the stress–energy tensor and hence are only radiated by quadrupole sources. These particles correspond to quantization of the Einstein–Hilbert action. For 10 points, name these spin-2 massless particles that mediate the weakest fundamental force. | gravitons | [
[
0,
127
],
[
128,
340
],
[
341,
507
],
[
508,
617
],
[
618,
724
],
[
725,
799
],
[
800,
895
]
] | {
"category": "science",
"category_full": "Science - Physics",
"category_main": "science-physics",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"physics"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-7_6 | These particles correspond to quantization of the Einstein–Hilbert action. | [
"gravitons"
] | acf-co24-1-7 | 6 | In 2015, Strominger et al. showed that a result named for these particles was a Ward identity of certain BMS supertranslations. They’re not photons, but the change in the S matrix when a zero momentum one of these particles is added to a vertex is given by that result, which is Weinberg’s theorem on the “soft” examples of these particles. Two-loop Feynman diagrams of interactions between these particles lead to ultraviolet divergence, but one-loop diagrams are finite due to a Gauss–Bonnet counterterm. The self-interaction of these particles reproduces an action proportional to “square root of negative det g.” These particles are coupled to the stress–energy tensor and hence are only radiated by quadrupole sources. These particles correspond to quantization of the Einstein–Hilbert action. For 10 points, name these spin-2 massless particles that mediate the weakest fundamental force. | gravitons | [
[
0,
127
],
[
128,
340
],
[
341,
507
],
[
508,
617
],
[
618,
724
],
[
725,
799
],
[
800,
895
]
] | {
"category": "science",
"category_full": "Science - Physics",
"category_main": "science-physics",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"physics"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-7_7 | For 10 points, name these spin-2 massless particles that mediate the weakest fundamental force. | [
"gravitons"
] | acf-co24-1-7 | 7 | In 2015, Strominger et al. showed that a result named for these particles was a Ward identity of certain BMS supertranslations. They’re not photons, but the change in the S matrix when a zero momentum one of these particles is added to a vertex is given by that result, which is Weinberg’s theorem on the “soft” examples of these particles. Two-loop Feynman diagrams of interactions between these particles lead to ultraviolet divergence, but one-loop diagrams are finite due to a Gauss–Bonnet counterterm. The self-interaction of these particles reproduces an action proportional to “square root of negative det g.” These particles are coupled to the stress–energy tensor and hence are only radiated by quadrupole sources. These particles correspond to quantization of the Einstein–Hilbert action. For 10 points, name these spin-2 massless particles that mediate the weakest fundamental force. | gravitons | [
[
0,
127
],
[
128,
340
],
[
341,
507
],
[
508,
617
],
[
618,
724
],
[
725,
799
],
[
800,
895
]
] | {
"category": "science",
"category_full": "Science - Physics",
"category_main": "science-physics",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"physics"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-8_1 | A book from this decade used the term “excentric positionality” to describe how man is “neither closest to nor furthest from himself.” | [
"1920s"
] | acf-co24-1-8 | 1 | A book from this decade used the term “excentric positionality” to describe how man is “neither closest to nor furthest from himself.” In this decade, Hendrik Pos interjected to say that “a completely different language” was being spoken by the two participants in a debate. In this decade, Helmuth Plessner complained about being treated as a mere expositor of the philosophical anthropology that his mentor developed in The Human Place in the Cosmos. Max Scheler turned away from Christianity at the start of this decade and died near its end. At the end of this decade, Kant and the Problem of Metaphysics was published by a thinker who had just challenged the Marburg school while debating Ernst Cassirer in Davos. In this decade, the Institute for Social Research was established in Frankfurt. For 10 points, name this decade in which Martin Heidegger published Being and Time. | 1920s [prompt on ’20s] | [
[
0,
134
],
[
135,
274
],
[
275,
452
],
[
453,
546
],
[
547,
719
],
[
720,
799
],
[
800,
883
]
] | {
"category": "philosophy",
"category_full": "Philosophy - Philosophy",
"category_main": "philosophy",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"philosophy"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-8_2 | In this decade, Hendrik Pos interjected to say that “a completely different language” was being spoken by the two participants in a debate. | [
"1920s"
] | acf-co24-1-8 | 2 | A book from this decade used the term “excentric positionality” to describe how man is “neither closest to nor furthest from himself.” In this decade, Hendrik Pos interjected to say that “a completely different language” was being spoken by the two participants in a debate. In this decade, Helmuth Plessner complained about being treated as a mere expositor of the philosophical anthropology that his mentor developed in The Human Place in the Cosmos. Max Scheler turned away from Christianity at the start of this decade and died near its end. At the end of this decade, Kant and the Problem of Metaphysics was published by a thinker who had just challenged the Marburg school while debating Ernst Cassirer in Davos. In this decade, the Institute for Social Research was established in Frankfurt. For 10 points, name this decade in which Martin Heidegger published Being and Time. | 1920s [prompt on ’20s] | [
[
0,
134
],
[
135,
274
],
[
275,
452
],
[
453,
546
],
[
547,
719
],
[
720,
799
],
[
800,
883
]
] | {
"category": "philosophy",
"category_full": "Philosophy - Philosophy",
"category_main": "philosophy",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"philosophy"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-8_3 | In this decade, Helmuth Plessner complained about being treated as a mere expositor of the philosophical anthropology that his mentor developed in The Human Place in the Cosmos. | [
"1920s"
] | acf-co24-1-8 | 3 | A book from this decade used the term “excentric positionality” to describe how man is “neither closest to nor furthest from himself.” In this decade, Hendrik Pos interjected to say that “a completely different language” was being spoken by the two participants in a debate. In this decade, Helmuth Plessner complained about being treated as a mere expositor of the philosophical anthropology that his mentor developed in The Human Place in the Cosmos. Max Scheler turned away from Christianity at the start of this decade and died near its end. At the end of this decade, Kant and the Problem of Metaphysics was published by a thinker who had just challenged the Marburg school while debating Ernst Cassirer in Davos. In this decade, the Institute for Social Research was established in Frankfurt. For 10 points, name this decade in which Martin Heidegger published Being and Time. | 1920s [prompt on ’20s] | [
[
0,
134
],
[
135,
274
],
[
275,
452
],
[
453,
546
],
[
547,
719
],
[
720,
799
],
[
800,
883
]
] | {
"category": "philosophy",
"category_full": "Philosophy - Philosophy",
"category_main": "philosophy",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"philosophy"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-8_4 | Max Scheler turned away from Christianity at the start of this decade and died near its end. | [
"1920s"
] | acf-co24-1-8 | 4 | A book from this decade used the term “excentric positionality” to describe how man is “neither closest to nor furthest from himself.” In this decade, Hendrik Pos interjected to say that “a completely different language” was being spoken by the two participants in a debate. In this decade, Helmuth Plessner complained about being treated as a mere expositor of the philosophical anthropology that his mentor developed in The Human Place in the Cosmos. Max Scheler turned away from Christianity at the start of this decade and died near its end. At the end of this decade, Kant and the Problem of Metaphysics was published by a thinker who had just challenged the Marburg school while debating Ernst Cassirer in Davos. In this decade, the Institute for Social Research was established in Frankfurt. For 10 points, name this decade in which Martin Heidegger published Being and Time. | 1920s [prompt on ’20s] | [
[
0,
134
],
[
135,
274
],
[
275,
452
],
[
453,
546
],
[
547,
719
],
[
720,
799
],
[
800,
883
]
] | {
"category": "philosophy",
"category_full": "Philosophy - Philosophy",
"category_main": "philosophy",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"philosophy"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-8_5 | At the end of this decade, Kant and the Problem of Metaphysics was published by a thinker who had just challenged the Marburg school while debating Ernst Cassirer in Davos. | [
"1920s"
] | acf-co24-1-8 | 5 | A book from this decade used the term “excentric positionality” to describe how man is “neither closest to nor furthest from himself.” In this decade, Hendrik Pos interjected to say that “a completely different language” was being spoken by the two participants in a debate. In this decade, Helmuth Plessner complained about being treated as a mere expositor of the philosophical anthropology that his mentor developed in The Human Place in the Cosmos. Max Scheler turned away from Christianity at the start of this decade and died near its end. At the end of this decade, Kant and the Problem of Metaphysics was published by a thinker who had just challenged the Marburg school while debating Ernst Cassirer in Davos. In this decade, the Institute for Social Research was established in Frankfurt. For 10 points, name this decade in which Martin Heidegger published Being and Time. | 1920s [prompt on ’20s] | [
[
0,
134
],
[
135,
274
],
[
275,
452
],
[
453,
546
],
[
547,
719
],
[
720,
799
],
[
800,
883
]
] | {
"category": "philosophy",
"category_full": "Philosophy - Philosophy",
"category_main": "philosophy",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"philosophy"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-8_6 | In this decade, the Institute for Social Research was established in Frankfurt. | [
"1920s"
] | acf-co24-1-8 | 6 | A book from this decade used the term “excentric positionality” to describe how man is “neither closest to nor furthest from himself.” In this decade, Hendrik Pos interjected to say that “a completely different language” was being spoken by the two participants in a debate. In this decade, Helmuth Plessner complained about being treated as a mere expositor of the philosophical anthropology that his mentor developed in The Human Place in the Cosmos. Max Scheler turned away from Christianity at the start of this decade and died near its end. At the end of this decade, Kant and the Problem of Metaphysics was published by a thinker who had just challenged the Marburg school while debating Ernst Cassirer in Davos. In this decade, the Institute for Social Research was established in Frankfurt. For 10 points, name this decade in which Martin Heidegger published Being and Time. | 1920s [prompt on ’20s] | [
[
0,
134
],
[
135,
274
],
[
275,
452
],
[
453,
546
],
[
547,
719
],
[
720,
799
],
[
800,
883
]
] | {
"category": "philosophy",
"category_full": "Philosophy - Philosophy",
"category_main": "philosophy",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"philosophy"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-8_7 | For 10 points, name this decade in which Martin Heidegger published Being and Time. | [
"1920s"
] | acf-co24-1-8 | 7 | A book from this decade used the term “excentric positionality” to describe how man is “neither closest to nor furthest from himself.” In this decade, Hendrik Pos interjected to say that “a completely different language” was being spoken by the two participants in a debate. In this decade, Helmuth Plessner complained about being treated as a mere expositor of the philosophical anthropology that his mentor developed in The Human Place in the Cosmos. Max Scheler turned away from Christianity at the start of this decade and died near its end. At the end of this decade, Kant and the Problem of Metaphysics was published by a thinker who had just challenged the Marburg school while debating Ernst Cassirer in Davos. In this decade, the Institute for Social Research was established in Frankfurt. For 10 points, name this decade in which Martin Heidegger published Being and Time. | 1920s [prompt on ’20s] | [
[
0,
134
],
[
135,
274
],
[
275,
452
],
[
453,
546
],
[
547,
719
],
[
720,
799
],
[
800,
883
]
] | {
"category": "philosophy",
"category_full": "Philosophy - Philosophy",
"category_main": "philosophy",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"philosophy"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-9_1 | A journal entry about people on this body of water ignoring the writer’s boat gave rise to the New Age legend of “invisible ships.” | [
"Botany Bay"
] | acf-co24-1-9 | 1 | A journal entry about people on this body of water ignoring the writer’s boat gave rise to the New Age legend of “invisible ships.” Repatriation efforts have targeted weapons stolen from this body of water, like four-pronged spears and a red mangrove shield. Though she actually lived to its north, the “king plate” gorget given to Cora Gooseberry calls her the “queen” of this body of water. An expedition to this body began the “tyranny of distance” and included Mary Bryant, who was later defended in court by James Boswell. A cape on this body of water is named for Daniel Solander, who visited it as one of the Linnaeus apostles. After the Gweagal people’s land along this body proved “unsuitable,” Arthur Phillip settled nearby at Port Jackson with the First Fleet. For 10 points, Joseph Banks called for penal settlement of what body of water where the HMS Endeavour collected plants? | Botany Bay [prompt on Tasman Sea or South Pacific Ocean] | [
[
0,
131
],
[
132,
258
],
[
259,
392
],
[
393,
528
],
[
529,
635
],
[
636,
772
],
[
773,
892
]
] | {
"category": "history",
"category_full": "History - Other History",
"category_main": "history-other-history",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-history"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-9_2 | Repatriation efforts have targeted weapons stolen from this body of water, like four-pronged spears and a red mangrove shield. | [
"Botany Bay"
] | acf-co24-1-9 | 2 | A journal entry about people on this body of water ignoring the writer’s boat gave rise to the New Age legend of “invisible ships.” Repatriation efforts have targeted weapons stolen from this body of water, like four-pronged spears and a red mangrove shield. Though she actually lived to its north, the “king plate” gorget given to Cora Gooseberry calls her the “queen” of this body of water. An expedition to this body began the “tyranny of distance” and included Mary Bryant, who was later defended in court by James Boswell. A cape on this body of water is named for Daniel Solander, who visited it as one of the Linnaeus apostles. After the Gweagal people’s land along this body proved “unsuitable,” Arthur Phillip settled nearby at Port Jackson with the First Fleet. For 10 points, Joseph Banks called for penal settlement of what body of water where the HMS Endeavour collected plants? | Botany Bay [prompt on Tasman Sea or South Pacific Ocean] | [
[
0,
131
],
[
132,
258
],
[
259,
392
],
[
393,
528
],
[
529,
635
],
[
636,
772
],
[
773,
892
]
] | {
"category": "history",
"category_full": "History - Other History",
"category_main": "history-other-history",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-history"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-9_3 | Though she actually lived to its north, the “king plate” gorget given to Cora Gooseberry calls her the “queen” of this body of water. | [
"Botany Bay"
] | acf-co24-1-9 | 3 | A journal entry about people on this body of water ignoring the writer’s boat gave rise to the New Age legend of “invisible ships.” Repatriation efforts have targeted weapons stolen from this body of water, like four-pronged spears and a red mangrove shield. Though she actually lived to its north, the “king plate” gorget given to Cora Gooseberry calls her the “queen” of this body of water. An expedition to this body began the “tyranny of distance” and included Mary Bryant, who was later defended in court by James Boswell. A cape on this body of water is named for Daniel Solander, who visited it as one of the Linnaeus apostles. After the Gweagal people’s land along this body proved “unsuitable,” Arthur Phillip settled nearby at Port Jackson with the First Fleet. For 10 points, Joseph Banks called for penal settlement of what body of water where the HMS Endeavour collected plants? | Botany Bay [prompt on Tasman Sea or South Pacific Ocean] | [
[
0,
131
],
[
132,
258
],
[
259,
392
],
[
393,
528
],
[
529,
635
],
[
636,
772
],
[
773,
892
]
] | {
"category": "history",
"category_full": "History - Other History",
"category_main": "history-other-history",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-history"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-9_4 | An expedition to this body began the “tyranny of distance” and included Mary Bryant, who was later defended in court by James Boswell. | [
"Botany Bay"
] | acf-co24-1-9 | 4 | A journal entry about people on this body of water ignoring the writer’s boat gave rise to the New Age legend of “invisible ships.” Repatriation efforts have targeted weapons stolen from this body of water, like four-pronged spears and a red mangrove shield. Though she actually lived to its north, the “king plate” gorget given to Cora Gooseberry calls her the “queen” of this body of water. An expedition to this body began the “tyranny of distance” and included Mary Bryant, who was later defended in court by James Boswell. A cape on this body of water is named for Daniel Solander, who visited it as one of the Linnaeus apostles. After the Gweagal people’s land along this body proved “unsuitable,” Arthur Phillip settled nearby at Port Jackson with the First Fleet. For 10 points, Joseph Banks called for penal settlement of what body of water where the HMS Endeavour collected plants? | Botany Bay [prompt on Tasman Sea or South Pacific Ocean] | [
[
0,
131
],
[
132,
258
],
[
259,
392
],
[
393,
528
],
[
529,
635
],
[
636,
772
],
[
773,
892
]
] | {
"category": "history",
"category_full": "History - Other History",
"category_main": "history-other-history",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-history"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-9_5 | A cape on this body of water is named for Daniel Solander, who visited it as one of the Linnaeus apostles. | [
"Botany Bay"
] | acf-co24-1-9 | 5 | A journal entry about people on this body of water ignoring the writer’s boat gave rise to the New Age legend of “invisible ships.” Repatriation efforts have targeted weapons stolen from this body of water, like four-pronged spears and a red mangrove shield. Though she actually lived to its north, the “king plate” gorget given to Cora Gooseberry calls her the “queen” of this body of water. An expedition to this body began the “tyranny of distance” and included Mary Bryant, who was later defended in court by James Boswell. A cape on this body of water is named for Daniel Solander, who visited it as one of the Linnaeus apostles. After the Gweagal people’s land along this body proved “unsuitable,” Arthur Phillip settled nearby at Port Jackson with the First Fleet. For 10 points, Joseph Banks called for penal settlement of what body of water where the HMS Endeavour collected plants? | Botany Bay [prompt on Tasman Sea or South Pacific Ocean] | [
[
0,
131
],
[
132,
258
],
[
259,
392
],
[
393,
528
],
[
529,
635
],
[
636,
772
],
[
773,
892
]
] | {
"category": "history",
"category_full": "History - Other History",
"category_main": "history-other-history",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-history"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-9_6 | After the Gweagal people’s land along this body proved “unsuitable,” Arthur Phillip settled nearby at Port Jackson with the First Fleet. | [
"Botany Bay"
] | acf-co24-1-9 | 6 | A journal entry about people on this body of water ignoring the writer’s boat gave rise to the New Age legend of “invisible ships.” Repatriation efforts have targeted weapons stolen from this body of water, like four-pronged spears and a red mangrove shield. Though she actually lived to its north, the “king plate” gorget given to Cora Gooseberry calls her the “queen” of this body of water. An expedition to this body began the “tyranny of distance” and included Mary Bryant, who was later defended in court by James Boswell. A cape on this body of water is named for Daniel Solander, who visited it as one of the Linnaeus apostles. After the Gweagal people’s land along this body proved “unsuitable,” Arthur Phillip settled nearby at Port Jackson with the First Fleet. For 10 points, Joseph Banks called for penal settlement of what body of water where the HMS Endeavour collected plants? | Botany Bay [prompt on Tasman Sea or South Pacific Ocean] | [
[
0,
131
],
[
132,
258
],
[
259,
392
],
[
393,
528
],
[
529,
635
],
[
636,
772
],
[
773,
892
]
] | {
"category": "history",
"category_full": "History - Other History",
"category_main": "history-other-history",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-history"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-9_7 | For 10 points, Joseph Banks called for penal settlement of what body of water where the HMS Endeavour collected plants? | [
"Botany Bay"
] | acf-co24-1-9 | 7 | A journal entry about people on this body of water ignoring the writer’s boat gave rise to the New Age legend of “invisible ships.” Repatriation efforts have targeted weapons stolen from this body of water, like four-pronged spears and a red mangrove shield. Though she actually lived to its north, the “king plate” gorget given to Cora Gooseberry calls her the “queen” of this body of water. An expedition to this body began the “tyranny of distance” and included Mary Bryant, who was later defended in court by James Boswell. A cape on this body of water is named for Daniel Solander, who visited it as one of the Linnaeus apostles. After the Gweagal people’s land along this body proved “unsuitable,” Arthur Phillip settled nearby at Port Jackson with the First Fleet. For 10 points, Joseph Banks called for penal settlement of what body of water where the HMS Endeavour collected plants? | Botany Bay [prompt on Tasman Sea or South Pacific Ocean] | [
[
0,
131
],
[
132,
258
],
[
259,
392
],
[
393,
528
],
[
529,
635
],
[
636,
772
],
[
773,
892
]
] | {
"category": "history",
"category_full": "History - Other History",
"category_main": "history-other-history",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-history"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-10_1 | A woman drags her “barking” shadow in a poem in this language, “Face of Rhythm,” which ends a collection structured around the 49 days that souls spend in limbo, Autobiography of Death. | [
"Korean",
"Hangukmal",
"Hangukeo"
] | acf-co24-1-10 | 1 | A woman drags her “barking” shadow in a poem in this language, “Face of Rhythm,” which ends a collection structured around the 49 days that souls spend in limbo, Autobiography of Death. A poem in this language calls its subject “a tap” but says that “the water running out of him is all shit, however.” This is the first language of an author who compared catering to the white poetic establishment and the work of Richard Pryor in the essay “Stand Up.” The narrator forgets the advice of “K,” one of the few Latin letters in the poem, and sits next to the title figure in a poem in this language by the author of At Thirty, the Party is Over. This is the first language of the author of Minor Feelings. This language is used by a poet who wrote of being assaulted by a once-perennial Nobel candidate in “Monster,” launching the #MeToo movement in her country. For 10 points, name this language of Ko Un and Choe Yeongmi. | Korean [or Hangukeo or Hangukmal] (Autobiography of Death is by Kim Hyesoon. Minor Feelings is by Cathy Park Hong.) | [
[
0,
185
],
[
186,
302
],
[
303,
453
],
[
454,
644
],
[
645,
704
],
[
705,
861
],
[
862,
922
]
] | {
"category": "literature",
"category_full": "Literature - World Literature",
"category_main": "literature-world-literature",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"world-literature"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-10_2 | A poem in this language calls its subject “a tap” but says that “the water running out of him is all shit, however.” | [
"Korean",
"Hangukmal",
"Hangukeo"
] | acf-co24-1-10 | 2 | A woman drags her “barking” shadow in a poem in this language, “Face of Rhythm,” which ends a collection structured around the 49 days that souls spend in limbo, Autobiography of Death. A poem in this language calls its subject “a tap” but says that “the water running out of him is all shit, however.” This is the first language of an author who compared catering to the white poetic establishment and the work of Richard Pryor in the essay “Stand Up.” The narrator forgets the advice of “K,” one of the few Latin letters in the poem, and sits next to the title figure in a poem in this language by the author of At Thirty, the Party is Over. This is the first language of the author of Minor Feelings. This language is used by a poet who wrote of being assaulted by a once-perennial Nobel candidate in “Monster,” launching the #MeToo movement in her country. For 10 points, name this language of Ko Un and Choe Yeongmi. | Korean [or Hangukeo or Hangukmal] (Autobiography of Death is by Kim Hyesoon. Minor Feelings is by Cathy Park Hong.) | [
[
0,
185
],
[
186,
302
],
[
303,
453
],
[
454,
644
],
[
645,
704
],
[
705,
861
],
[
862,
922
]
] | {
"category": "literature",
"category_full": "Literature - World Literature",
"category_main": "literature-world-literature",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"world-literature"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-10_3 | This is the first language of an author who compared catering to the white poetic establishment and the work of Richard Pryor in the essay “Stand Up.” | [
"Korean",
"Hangukmal",
"Hangukeo"
] | acf-co24-1-10 | 3 | A woman drags her “barking” shadow in a poem in this language, “Face of Rhythm,” which ends a collection structured around the 49 days that souls spend in limbo, Autobiography of Death. A poem in this language calls its subject “a tap” but says that “the water running out of him is all shit, however.” This is the first language of an author who compared catering to the white poetic establishment and the work of Richard Pryor in the essay “Stand Up.” The narrator forgets the advice of “K,” one of the few Latin letters in the poem, and sits next to the title figure in a poem in this language by the author of At Thirty, the Party is Over. This is the first language of the author of Minor Feelings. This language is used by a poet who wrote of being assaulted by a once-perennial Nobel candidate in “Monster,” launching the #MeToo movement in her country. For 10 points, name this language of Ko Un and Choe Yeongmi. | Korean [or Hangukeo or Hangukmal] (Autobiography of Death is by Kim Hyesoon. Minor Feelings is by Cathy Park Hong.) | [
[
0,
185
],
[
186,
302
],
[
303,
453
],
[
454,
644
],
[
645,
704
],
[
705,
861
],
[
862,
922
]
] | {
"category": "literature",
"category_full": "Literature - World Literature",
"category_main": "literature-world-literature",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"world-literature"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-10_4 | The narrator forgets the advice of “K,” one of the few Latin letters in the poem, and sits next to the title figure in a poem in this language by the author of At Thirty, the Party is Over. | [
"Korean",
"Hangukmal",
"Hangukeo"
] | acf-co24-1-10 | 4 | A woman drags her “barking” shadow in a poem in this language, “Face of Rhythm,” which ends a collection structured around the 49 days that souls spend in limbo, Autobiography of Death. A poem in this language calls its subject “a tap” but says that “the water running out of him is all shit, however.” This is the first language of an author who compared catering to the white poetic establishment and the work of Richard Pryor in the essay “Stand Up.” The narrator forgets the advice of “K,” one of the few Latin letters in the poem, and sits next to the title figure in a poem in this language by the author of At Thirty, the Party is Over. This is the first language of the author of Minor Feelings. This language is used by a poet who wrote of being assaulted by a once-perennial Nobel candidate in “Monster,” launching the #MeToo movement in her country. For 10 points, name this language of Ko Un and Choe Yeongmi. | Korean [or Hangukeo or Hangukmal] (Autobiography of Death is by Kim Hyesoon. Minor Feelings is by Cathy Park Hong.) | [
[
0,
185
],
[
186,
302
],
[
303,
453
],
[
454,
644
],
[
645,
704
],
[
705,
861
],
[
862,
922
]
] | {
"category": "literature",
"category_full": "Literature - World Literature",
"category_main": "literature-world-literature",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"world-literature"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-10_5 | This is the first language of the author of Minor Feelings. | [
"Korean",
"Hangukmal",
"Hangukeo"
] | acf-co24-1-10 | 5 | A woman drags her “barking” shadow in a poem in this language, “Face of Rhythm,” which ends a collection structured around the 49 days that souls spend in limbo, Autobiography of Death. A poem in this language calls its subject “a tap” but says that “the water running out of him is all shit, however.” This is the first language of an author who compared catering to the white poetic establishment and the work of Richard Pryor in the essay “Stand Up.” The narrator forgets the advice of “K,” one of the few Latin letters in the poem, and sits next to the title figure in a poem in this language by the author of At Thirty, the Party is Over. This is the first language of the author of Minor Feelings. This language is used by a poet who wrote of being assaulted by a once-perennial Nobel candidate in “Monster,” launching the #MeToo movement in her country. For 10 points, name this language of Ko Un and Choe Yeongmi. | Korean [or Hangukeo or Hangukmal] (Autobiography of Death is by Kim Hyesoon. Minor Feelings is by Cathy Park Hong.) | [
[
0,
185
],
[
186,
302
],
[
303,
453
],
[
454,
644
],
[
645,
704
],
[
705,
861
],
[
862,
922
]
] | {
"category": "literature",
"category_full": "Literature - World Literature",
"category_main": "literature-world-literature",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"world-literature"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-10_6 | This language is used by a poet who wrote of being assaulted by a once-perennial Nobel candidate in “Monster,” launching the #MeToo movement in her country. | [
"Korean",
"Hangukmal",
"Hangukeo"
] | acf-co24-1-10 | 6 | A woman drags her “barking” shadow in a poem in this language, “Face of Rhythm,” which ends a collection structured around the 49 days that souls spend in limbo, Autobiography of Death. A poem in this language calls its subject “a tap” but says that “the water running out of him is all shit, however.” This is the first language of an author who compared catering to the white poetic establishment and the work of Richard Pryor in the essay “Stand Up.” The narrator forgets the advice of “K,” one of the few Latin letters in the poem, and sits next to the title figure in a poem in this language by the author of At Thirty, the Party is Over. This is the first language of the author of Minor Feelings. This language is used by a poet who wrote of being assaulted by a once-perennial Nobel candidate in “Monster,” launching the #MeToo movement in her country. For 10 points, name this language of Ko Un and Choe Yeongmi. | Korean [or Hangukeo or Hangukmal] (Autobiography of Death is by Kim Hyesoon. Minor Feelings is by Cathy Park Hong.) | [
[
0,
185
],
[
186,
302
],
[
303,
453
],
[
454,
644
],
[
645,
704
],
[
705,
861
],
[
862,
922
]
] | {
"category": "literature",
"category_full": "Literature - World Literature",
"category_main": "literature-world-literature",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"world-literature"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-10_7 | For 10 points, name this language of Ko Un and Choe Yeongmi. | [
"Korean",
"Hangukmal",
"Hangukeo"
] | acf-co24-1-10 | 7 | A woman drags her “barking” shadow in a poem in this language, “Face of Rhythm,” which ends a collection structured around the 49 days that souls spend in limbo, Autobiography of Death. A poem in this language calls its subject “a tap” but says that “the water running out of him is all shit, however.” This is the first language of an author who compared catering to the white poetic establishment and the work of Richard Pryor in the essay “Stand Up.” The narrator forgets the advice of “K,” one of the few Latin letters in the poem, and sits next to the title figure in a poem in this language by the author of At Thirty, the Party is Over. This is the first language of the author of Minor Feelings. This language is used by a poet who wrote of being assaulted by a once-perennial Nobel candidate in “Monster,” launching the #MeToo movement in her country. For 10 points, name this language of Ko Un and Choe Yeongmi. | Korean [or Hangukeo or Hangukmal] (Autobiography of Death is by Kim Hyesoon. Minor Feelings is by Cathy Park Hong.) | [
[
0,
185
],
[
186,
302
],
[
303,
453
],
[
454,
644
],
[
645,
704
],
[
705,
861
],
[
862,
922
]
] | {
"category": "literature",
"category_full": "Literature - World Literature",
"category_main": "literature-world-literature",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"world-literature"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-11_1 | Starting at embryonic day 9.5, development of a subset of these cells is driven by Pax1 expression, and these cells also require Hoxa3 after day 11 for sustained growth. | [
"thymic epithelial cells",
"cortical thymic epithelial cells",
"thymus epithelial cells",
"thymic tuft cells",
"junctional thymic epithelial cells",
"medullary thymic epithelial cells",
"mTECs",
"TECs",
"cTECs",
"jTECs"
] | acf-co24-1-11 | 1 | Starting at embryonic day 9.5, development of a subset of these cells is driven by Pax1 expression, and these cells also require Hoxa3 after day 11 for sustained growth. One class of these cells uses the zinc finger protein FezF2 to help carry out a “promiscuous” process with adjacent developing cells. Transgenic mice for studying these cells are frequently controlled by a Foxn1 promoter. Deficiencies in at least one class of these cells will impair formation of Hassall’s corpuscles. A mature class of these cells presents tissue-restricted antigens to one class of developing lymphocytes via the protein AIRE. That class of these cells is named for their location in the medulla of a naturally involuting organ, as opposed to their cortical counterparts that regulate positive selection. For 10 points, name these stromal cells from a namesake organ that mediate multiple key steps in T-cell development. | thymic epithelial cells [or medullary thymic epithelial cells; or cortical thymic epithelial cells; or thymus epithelial cells; accept TECs (“teks”); accept mTECs (“M-teks”) or cTECs (“C-teks”); accept junctional thymic epithelial cells or jTECs (“J-teks”); accept thymic tuft cells; prompt on epithelial cells by asking “in which organ?”] (The clues in order refer to: thymic tuft cells, mTECs, PGE and AIRE+ mTECs, all TECs broadly, jTECs/mTECS, just mTECs, cTECs, TECs generally.) | [
[
0,
169
],
[
170,
303
],
[
304,
391
],
[
392,
489
],
[
490,
616
],
[
617,
794
],
[
795,
911
]
] | {
"category": "science",
"category_full": "Science - Biology",
"category_main": "science-biology",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"biology"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-11_2 | One class of these cells uses the zinc finger protein FezF2 to help carry out a “promiscuous” process with adjacent developing cells. | [
"thymic epithelial cells",
"cortical thymic epithelial cells",
"thymus epithelial cells",
"thymic tuft cells",
"junctional thymic epithelial cells",
"medullary thymic epithelial cells",
"mTECs",
"TECs",
"cTECs",
"jTECs"
] | acf-co24-1-11 | 2 | Starting at embryonic day 9.5, development of a subset of these cells is driven by Pax1 expression, and these cells also require Hoxa3 after day 11 for sustained growth. One class of these cells uses the zinc finger protein FezF2 to help carry out a “promiscuous” process with adjacent developing cells. Transgenic mice for studying these cells are frequently controlled by a Foxn1 promoter. Deficiencies in at least one class of these cells will impair formation of Hassall’s corpuscles. A mature class of these cells presents tissue-restricted antigens to one class of developing lymphocytes via the protein AIRE. That class of these cells is named for their location in the medulla of a naturally involuting organ, as opposed to their cortical counterparts that regulate positive selection. For 10 points, name these stromal cells from a namesake organ that mediate multiple key steps in T-cell development. | thymic epithelial cells [or medullary thymic epithelial cells; or cortical thymic epithelial cells; or thymus epithelial cells; accept TECs (“teks”); accept mTECs (“M-teks”) or cTECs (“C-teks”); accept junctional thymic epithelial cells or jTECs (“J-teks”); accept thymic tuft cells; prompt on epithelial cells by asking “in which organ?”] (The clues in order refer to: thymic tuft cells, mTECs, PGE and AIRE+ mTECs, all TECs broadly, jTECs/mTECS, just mTECs, cTECs, TECs generally.) | [
[
0,
169
],
[
170,
303
],
[
304,
391
],
[
392,
489
],
[
490,
616
],
[
617,
794
],
[
795,
911
]
] | {
"category": "science",
"category_full": "Science - Biology",
"category_main": "science-biology",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"biology"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-11_3 | Transgenic mice for studying these cells are frequently controlled by a Foxn1 promoter. | [
"thymic epithelial cells",
"cortical thymic epithelial cells",
"thymus epithelial cells",
"thymic tuft cells",
"junctional thymic epithelial cells",
"medullary thymic epithelial cells",
"mTECs",
"TECs",
"cTECs",
"jTECs"
] | acf-co24-1-11 | 3 | Starting at embryonic day 9.5, development of a subset of these cells is driven by Pax1 expression, and these cells also require Hoxa3 after day 11 for sustained growth. One class of these cells uses the zinc finger protein FezF2 to help carry out a “promiscuous” process with adjacent developing cells. Transgenic mice for studying these cells are frequently controlled by a Foxn1 promoter. Deficiencies in at least one class of these cells will impair formation of Hassall’s corpuscles. A mature class of these cells presents tissue-restricted antigens to one class of developing lymphocytes via the protein AIRE. That class of these cells is named for their location in the medulla of a naturally involuting organ, as opposed to their cortical counterparts that regulate positive selection. For 10 points, name these stromal cells from a namesake organ that mediate multiple key steps in T-cell development. | thymic epithelial cells [or medullary thymic epithelial cells; or cortical thymic epithelial cells; or thymus epithelial cells; accept TECs (“teks”); accept mTECs (“M-teks”) or cTECs (“C-teks”); accept junctional thymic epithelial cells or jTECs (“J-teks”); accept thymic tuft cells; prompt on epithelial cells by asking “in which organ?”] (The clues in order refer to: thymic tuft cells, mTECs, PGE and AIRE+ mTECs, all TECs broadly, jTECs/mTECS, just mTECs, cTECs, TECs generally.) | [
[
0,
169
],
[
170,
303
],
[
304,
391
],
[
392,
489
],
[
490,
616
],
[
617,
794
],
[
795,
911
]
] | {
"category": "science",
"category_full": "Science - Biology",
"category_main": "science-biology",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"biology"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-11_4 | Deficiencies in at least one class of these cells will impair formation of Hassall’s corpuscles. | [
"thymic epithelial cells",
"cortical thymic epithelial cells",
"thymus epithelial cells",
"thymic tuft cells",
"junctional thymic epithelial cells",
"medullary thymic epithelial cells",
"mTECs",
"TECs",
"cTECs",
"jTECs"
] | acf-co24-1-11 | 4 | Starting at embryonic day 9.5, development of a subset of these cells is driven by Pax1 expression, and these cells also require Hoxa3 after day 11 for sustained growth. One class of these cells uses the zinc finger protein FezF2 to help carry out a “promiscuous” process with adjacent developing cells. Transgenic mice for studying these cells are frequently controlled by a Foxn1 promoter. Deficiencies in at least one class of these cells will impair formation of Hassall’s corpuscles. A mature class of these cells presents tissue-restricted antigens to one class of developing lymphocytes via the protein AIRE. That class of these cells is named for their location in the medulla of a naturally involuting organ, as opposed to their cortical counterparts that regulate positive selection. For 10 points, name these stromal cells from a namesake organ that mediate multiple key steps in T-cell development. | thymic epithelial cells [or medullary thymic epithelial cells; or cortical thymic epithelial cells; or thymus epithelial cells; accept TECs (“teks”); accept mTECs (“M-teks”) or cTECs (“C-teks”); accept junctional thymic epithelial cells or jTECs (“J-teks”); accept thymic tuft cells; prompt on epithelial cells by asking “in which organ?”] (The clues in order refer to: thymic tuft cells, mTECs, PGE and AIRE+ mTECs, all TECs broadly, jTECs/mTECS, just mTECs, cTECs, TECs generally.) | [
[
0,
169
],
[
170,
303
],
[
304,
391
],
[
392,
489
],
[
490,
616
],
[
617,
794
],
[
795,
911
]
] | {
"category": "science",
"category_full": "Science - Biology",
"category_main": "science-biology",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"biology"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-11_5 | A mature class of these cells presents tissue-restricted antigens to one class of developing lymphocytes via the protein AIRE. | [
"thymic epithelial cells",
"cortical thymic epithelial cells",
"thymus epithelial cells",
"thymic tuft cells",
"junctional thymic epithelial cells",
"medullary thymic epithelial cells",
"mTECs",
"TECs",
"cTECs",
"jTECs"
] | acf-co24-1-11 | 5 | Starting at embryonic day 9.5, development of a subset of these cells is driven by Pax1 expression, and these cells also require Hoxa3 after day 11 for sustained growth. One class of these cells uses the zinc finger protein FezF2 to help carry out a “promiscuous” process with adjacent developing cells. Transgenic mice for studying these cells are frequently controlled by a Foxn1 promoter. Deficiencies in at least one class of these cells will impair formation of Hassall’s corpuscles. A mature class of these cells presents tissue-restricted antigens to one class of developing lymphocytes via the protein AIRE. That class of these cells is named for their location in the medulla of a naturally involuting organ, as opposed to their cortical counterparts that regulate positive selection. For 10 points, name these stromal cells from a namesake organ that mediate multiple key steps in T-cell development. | thymic epithelial cells [or medullary thymic epithelial cells; or cortical thymic epithelial cells; or thymus epithelial cells; accept TECs (“teks”); accept mTECs (“M-teks”) or cTECs (“C-teks”); accept junctional thymic epithelial cells or jTECs (“J-teks”); accept thymic tuft cells; prompt on epithelial cells by asking “in which organ?”] (The clues in order refer to: thymic tuft cells, mTECs, PGE and AIRE+ mTECs, all TECs broadly, jTECs/mTECS, just mTECs, cTECs, TECs generally.) | [
[
0,
169
],
[
170,
303
],
[
304,
391
],
[
392,
489
],
[
490,
616
],
[
617,
794
],
[
795,
911
]
] | {
"category": "science",
"category_full": "Science - Biology",
"category_main": "science-biology",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"biology"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-11_6 | That class of these cells is named for their location in the medulla of a naturally involuting organ, as opposed to their cortical counterparts that regulate positive selection. | [
"thymic epithelial cells",
"cortical thymic epithelial cells",
"thymus epithelial cells",
"thymic tuft cells",
"junctional thymic epithelial cells",
"medullary thymic epithelial cells",
"mTECs",
"TECs",
"cTECs",
"jTECs"
] | acf-co24-1-11 | 6 | Starting at embryonic day 9.5, development of a subset of these cells is driven by Pax1 expression, and these cells also require Hoxa3 after day 11 for sustained growth. One class of these cells uses the zinc finger protein FezF2 to help carry out a “promiscuous” process with adjacent developing cells. Transgenic mice for studying these cells are frequently controlled by a Foxn1 promoter. Deficiencies in at least one class of these cells will impair formation of Hassall’s corpuscles. A mature class of these cells presents tissue-restricted antigens to one class of developing lymphocytes via the protein AIRE. That class of these cells is named for their location in the medulla of a naturally involuting organ, as opposed to their cortical counterparts that regulate positive selection. For 10 points, name these stromal cells from a namesake organ that mediate multiple key steps in T-cell development. | thymic epithelial cells [or medullary thymic epithelial cells; or cortical thymic epithelial cells; or thymus epithelial cells; accept TECs (“teks”); accept mTECs (“M-teks”) or cTECs (“C-teks”); accept junctional thymic epithelial cells or jTECs (“J-teks”); accept thymic tuft cells; prompt on epithelial cells by asking “in which organ?”] (The clues in order refer to: thymic tuft cells, mTECs, PGE and AIRE+ mTECs, all TECs broadly, jTECs/mTECS, just mTECs, cTECs, TECs generally.) | [
[
0,
169
],
[
170,
303
],
[
304,
391
],
[
392,
489
],
[
490,
616
],
[
617,
794
],
[
795,
911
]
] | {
"category": "science",
"category_full": "Science - Biology",
"category_main": "science-biology",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"biology"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-11_7 | For 10 points, name these stromal cells from a namesake organ that mediate multiple key steps in T-cell development. | [
"thymic epithelial cells",
"cortical thymic epithelial cells",
"thymus epithelial cells",
"thymic tuft cells",
"junctional thymic epithelial cells",
"medullary thymic epithelial cells",
"mTECs",
"TECs",
"cTECs",
"jTECs"
] | acf-co24-1-11 | 7 | Starting at embryonic day 9.5, development of a subset of these cells is driven by Pax1 expression, and these cells also require Hoxa3 after day 11 for sustained growth. One class of these cells uses the zinc finger protein FezF2 to help carry out a “promiscuous” process with adjacent developing cells. Transgenic mice for studying these cells are frequently controlled by a Foxn1 promoter. Deficiencies in at least one class of these cells will impair formation of Hassall’s corpuscles. A mature class of these cells presents tissue-restricted antigens to one class of developing lymphocytes via the protein AIRE. That class of these cells is named for their location in the medulla of a naturally involuting organ, as opposed to their cortical counterparts that regulate positive selection. For 10 points, name these stromal cells from a namesake organ that mediate multiple key steps in T-cell development. | thymic epithelial cells [or medullary thymic epithelial cells; or cortical thymic epithelial cells; or thymus epithelial cells; accept TECs (“teks”); accept mTECs (“M-teks”) or cTECs (“C-teks”); accept junctional thymic epithelial cells or jTECs (“J-teks”); accept thymic tuft cells; prompt on epithelial cells by asking “in which organ?”] (The clues in order refer to: thymic tuft cells, mTECs, PGE and AIRE+ mTECs, all TECs broadly, jTECs/mTECS, just mTECs, cTECs, TECs generally.) | [
[
0,
169
],
[
170,
303
],
[
304,
391
],
[
392,
489
],
[
490,
616
],
[
617,
794
],
[
795,
911
]
] | {
"category": "science",
"category_full": "Science - Biology",
"category_main": "science-biology",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"biology"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-12_1 | In a 1971 film, a laundry strike in this city thwarts a man trying to wash his only suit for an interview. | [
"Calcutta",
"Kolkata"
] | acf-co24-1-12 | 1 | In a 1971 film, a laundry strike in this city thwarts a man trying to wash his only suit for an interview. In a film set in this city, a bored woman peers through her house’s blinds at its streets, then stares at her oblivious husband, all through opera glasses. A woman wears sunglasses and lipstick for her new job as a saleswoman in this title “big city” of a 1963 film. A jobless aspiring novelist in this city marries his cousin on a whim in a 1959 film titled for his “world.” Two parks in this city are themed on a director’s characters Professor Shonku and Feluda. 1960s films about this city’s women include The Cloud-Capped Star and Charulata. A director from this city, who began as location scout for The River by Jean Renoir, shot in this city’s film hub of Tollygunge for urban scenes in the two sequels to Pather Panchali. For 10 points, Satyajit Ray was from what city in West Bengal? | Kolkata [or Calcutta] (The films mentioned are: Interview by Mrinal Sen; Charulata, Mahanagar, and Apur Sansar by Satyajit Ray. Ray created Professor Shonku and Feluda and was a protégé of Jean Renoir.) | [
[
0,
106
],
[
107,
262
],
[
263,
373
],
[
374,
482
],
[
483,
654
],
[
655,
838
],
[
839,
901
]
] | {
"category": "fine-arts",
"category_full": "Fine Arts - Other Arts",
"category_main": "fine-arts-other-arts",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-arts"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-12_2 | In a film set in this city, a bored woman peers through her house’s blinds at its streets, then stares at her oblivious husband, all through opera glasses. | [
"Calcutta",
"Kolkata"
] | acf-co24-1-12 | 2 | In a 1971 film, a laundry strike in this city thwarts a man trying to wash his only suit for an interview. In a film set in this city, a bored woman peers through her house’s blinds at its streets, then stares at her oblivious husband, all through opera glasses. A woman wears sunglasses and lipstick for her new job as a saleswoman in this title “big city” of a 1963 film. A jobless aspiring novelist in this city marries his cousin on a whim in a 1959 film titled for his “world.” Two parks in this city are themed on a director’s characters Professor Shonku and Feluda. 1960s films about this city’s women include The Cloud-Capped Star and Charulata. A director from this city, who began as location scout for The River by Jean Renoir, shot in this city’s film hub of Tollygunge for urban scenes in the two sequels to Pather Panchali. For 10 points, Satyajit Ray was from what city in West Bengal? | Kolkata [or Calcutta] (The films mentioned are: Interview by Mrinal Sen; Charulata, Mahanagar, and Apur Sansar by Satyajit Ray. Ray created Professor Shonku and Feluda and was a protégé of Jean Renoir.) | [
[
0,
106
],
[
107,
262
],
[
263,
373
],
[
374,
482
],
[
483,
654
],
[
655,
838
],
[
839,
901
]
] | {
"category": "fine-arts",
"category_full": "Fine Arts - Other Arts",
"category_main": "fine-arts-other-arts",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-arts"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-12_3 | A woman wears sunglasses and lipstick for her new job as a saleswoman in this title “big city” of a 1963 film. | [
"Calcutta",
"Kolkata"
] | acf-co24-1-12 | 3 | In a 1971 film, a laundry strike in this city thwarts a man trying to wash his only suit for an interview. In a film set in this city, a bored woman peers through her house’s blinds at its streets, then stares at her oblivious husband, all through opera glasses. A woman wears sunglasses and lipstick for her new job as a saleswoman in this title “big city” of a 1963 film. A jobless aspiring novelist in this city marries his cousin on a whim in a 1959 film titled for his “world.” Two parks in this city are themed on a director’s characters Professor Shonku and Feluda. 1960s films about this city’s women include The Cloud-Capped Star and Charulata. A director from this city, who began as location scout for The River by Jean Renoir, shot in this city’s film hub of Tollygunge for urban scenes in the two sequels to Pather Panchali. For 10 points, Satyajit Ray was from what city in West Bengal? | Kolkata [or Calcutta] (The films mentioned are: Interview by Mrinal Sen; Charulata, Mahanagar, and Apur Sansar by Satyajit Ray. Ray created Professor Shonku and Feluda and was a protégé of Jean Renoir.) | [
[
0,
106
],
[
107,
262
],
[
263,
373
],
[
374,
482
],
[
483,
654
],
[
655,
838
],
[
839,
901
]
] | {
"category": "fine-arts",
"category_full": "Fine Arts - Other Arts",
"category_main": "fine-arts-other-arts",
"difficulty": "Open",
"packet": "Packet A. An + Karthik",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-arts"
]
} |
acf-co24-1-12_4 | A jobless aspiring novelist in this city marries his cousin on a whim in a 1959 film titled for his “world.” | [
"Calcutta",
"Kolkata"
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acf-co24-1-12_5 | Two parks in this city are themed on a director’s characters Professor Shonku and Feluda. 1960s films about this city’s women include The Cloud-Capped Star and Charulata. | [
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acf-co24-1-12_6 | A director from this city, who began as location scout for The River by Jean Renoir, shot in this city’s film hub of Tollygunge for urban scenes in the two sequels to Pather Panchali. | [
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"Kolkata"
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acf-co24-1-12_7 | For 10 points, Satyajit Ray was from what city in West Bengal? | [
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"Kolkata"
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acf-co24-1-13_1 | This leader developed a precursor of non-alignment called “negative equilibrium.” | [
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"Mohammed Mossadiq",
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acf-co24-1-13_2 | A plot against this leader was encouraged by Ann Lambton, backed by the Rashidian brothers’ gangs, and signaled by the phrase “It is now exactly midnight.” | [
"Mohammed Mossadeq",
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acf-co24-1-13_3 | An action spearheaded by this leader aimed in part to relieve workers in a shanty town called “Paper City.” | [
"Mohammed Mossadeq",
"Mohammed Mossadiq",
"Mohammed Mossadegh"
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acf-co24-1-13_4 | This notoriously weepy leader lay in bed wearing pink pajamas during negotiations with Averell Harriman that helped make him Time’s Man of the Year for 1951. | [
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acf-co24-1-13_5 | This leader of the National Front came to power after General Razmara was assassinated for opposing his campaign against the “Seven Sisters” cartel. | [
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acf-co24-1-13_6 | Kermit Roosevelt led Operation Ajax to depose this ally of the Tudeh Party, ending the Royal Navy’s blockade of his port of Abadan. | [
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acf-co24-1-13_7 | For 10 points, name this prime minister of Iran who nationalized the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company. | [
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"Mohammed Mossadegh"
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acf-co24-1-14_1 | A quote from this thinker that translates as “And the soldiers lined the streets? THEY LINED THEM” ends the “Triumphal March” from Coriolan. | [
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acf-co24-1-14_2 | T. E. Hulme and T. S. Eliot drew on the anti-Romanticism of this thinker’s essays like “The Future of the Intelligentsia.” | [
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acf-co24-1-14_3 | A synthesis of this thinker’s work and the left-wing author of Reflections on Violence was propounded by the Proudhon Circle. | [
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acf-co24-1-14_4 | This thinker exempted Jean Moréas, a fellow member of the anti-Symbolist école romane, from his attacks on a vague class of foreigners he dubbed métèques. | [
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acf-co24-1-14_5 | Georges Sorel abandoned syndicalism for this man’s “integral nationalism.” | [
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acf-co24-1-14_6 | The Camelots du Roi were the youth wing of a group led by this man that spearheaded riots on February 6th, 1934, in response to Camille Chautemps’s cover-up of the Stavisky Affair. | [
"Charles Maurras"
] | acf-co24-1-14 | 6 | A quote from this thinker that translates as “And the soldiers lined the streets? THEY LINED THEM” ends the “Triumphal March” from Coriolan. T. E. Hulme and T. S. Eliot drew on the anti-Romanticism of this thinker’s essays like “The Future of the Intelligentsia.” A synthesis of this thinker’s work and the left-wing author of Reflections on Violence was propounded by the Proudhon Circle. This thinker exempted Jean Moréas, a fellow member of the anti-Symbolist école romane, from his attacks on a vague class of foreigners he dubbed métèques. Georges Sorel abandoned syndicalism for this man’s “integral nationalism.” The Camelots du Roi were the youth wing of a group led by this man that spearheaded riots on February 6th, 1934, in response to Camille Chautemps’s cover-up of the Stavisky Affair. For 10 points, name this anti-Dreyfusard who was the principal ideologue of the monarchist Action Française movement. | Charles Maurras (“mo-ROSS”) | [
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acf-co24-1-14_7 | For 10 points, name this anti-Dreyfusard who was the principal ideologue of the monarchist Action Française movement. | [
"Charles Maurras"
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acf-co24-1-15_1 | A play by this author, in which a viper bites a woman named both “Marguerite Ida” and “Helena Annabel,” was mashed up with Olga’s House of Shame by the Wooster Group and revived at the Hebel Theater by Robert Wilson. | [
"Gertrude Stein"
] | acf-co24-1-15 | 1 | A play by this author, in which a viper bites a woman named both “Marguerite Ida” and “Helena Annabel,” was mashed up with Olga’s House of Shame by the Wooster Group and revived at the Hebel Theater by Robert Wilson. The Living Theatre’s first piece was this author’s “curtain raiser” Ladies’ Voices. This author implemented a theory of the “play as landscape” in Doctor Faustus Lights the Lights. A novel by Wolfgang Koeppen takes its title from a work by this author that ends with a ghostly voice declaiming on “my long life, my long life” after a statue is unveiled at the US Capitol. In a theatrical work with text by this author, Ignatius wonders “if a magpie in the sky on the sky can not cry” after seeing “pigeons on the grass alas.” This author wrote a libretto about Susan B. Anthony for The Mother of Us All. For 10 points, what author collaborated with Virgil Thompson on Four Saints in Three Acts? | Gertrude Stein | [
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acf-co24-1-15_2 | The Living Theatre’s first piece was this author’s “curtain raiser” Ladies’ Voices. | [
"Gertrude Stein"
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acf-co24-1-15_3 | This author implemented a theory of the “play as landscape” in Doctor Faustus Lights the Lights. | [
"Gertrude Stein"
] | acf-co24-1-15 | 3 | A play by this author, in which a viper bites a woman named both “Marguerite Ida” and “Helena Annabel,” was mashed up with Olga’s House of Shame by the Wooster Group and revived at the Hebel Theater by Robert Wilson. The Living Theatre’s first piece was this author’s “curtain raiser” Ladies’ Voices. This author implemented a theory of the “play as landscape” in Doctor Faustus Lights the Lights. A novel by Wolfgang Koeppen takes its title from a work by this author that ends with a ghostly voice declaiming on “my long life, my long life” after a statue is unveiled at the US Capitol. In a theatrical work with text by this author, Ignatius wonders “if a magpie in the sky on the sky can not cry” after seeing “pigeons on the grass alas.” This author wrote a libretto about Susan B. Anthony for The Mother of Us All. For 10 points, what author collaborated with Virgil Thompson on Four Saints in Three Acts? | Gertrude Stein | [
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acf-co24-1-15_4 | A novel by Wolfgang Koeppen takes its title from a work by this author that ends with a ghostly voice declaiming on “my long life, my long life” after a statue is unveiled at the US Capitol. | [
"Gertrude Stein"
] | acf-co24-1-15 | 4 | A play by this author, in which a viper bites a woman named both “Marguerite Ida” and “Helena Annabel,” was mashed up with Olga’s House of Shame by the Wooster Group and revived at the Hebel Theater by Robert Wilson. The Living Theatre’s first piece was this author’s “curtain raiser” Ladies’ Voices. This author implemented a theory of the “play as landscape” in Doctor Faustus Lights the Lights. A novel by Wolfgang Koeppen takes its title from a work by this author that ends with a ghostly voice declaiming on “my long life, my long life” after a statue is unveiled at the US Capitol. In a theatrical work with text by this author, Ignatius wonders “if a magpie in the sky on the sky can not cry” after seeing “pigeons on the grass alas.” This author wrote a libretto about Susan B. Anthony for The Mother of Us All. For 10 points, what author collaborated with Virgil Thompson on Four Saints in Three Acts? | Gertrude Stein | [
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acf-co24-1-15_5 | In a theatrical work with text by this author, Ignatius wonders “if a magpie in the sky on the sky can not cry” after seeing “pigeons on the grass alas.” | [
"Gertrude Stein"
] | acf-co24-1-15 | 5 | A play by this author, in which a viper bites a woman named both “Marguerite Ida” and “Helena Annabel,” was mashed up with Olga’s House of Shame by the Wooster Group and revived at the Hebel Theater by Robert Wilson. The Living Theatre’s first piece was this author’s “curtain raiser” Ladies’ Voices. This author implemented a theory of the “play as landscape” in Doctor Faustus Lights the Lights. A novel by Wolfgang Koeppen takes its title from a work by this author that ends with a ghostly voice declaiming on “my long life, my long life” after a statue is unveiled at the US Capitol. In a theatrical work with text by this author, Ignatius wonders “if a magpie in the sky on the sky can not cry” after seeing “pigeons on the grass alas.” This author wrote a libretto about Susan B. Anthony for The Mother of Us All. For 10 points, what author collaborated with Virgil Thompson on Four Saints in Three Acts? | Gertrude Stein | [
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Subsets and Splits