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acf-co24-10-12_4 | This author incorporated excerpts from Shinichi Suzuki’s autobiography in a story from her collection Break It Down. | [
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acf-co24-10-12_5 | A story by this author consists solely of James Boswell’s statement that “Samuel Johnson is indignant that Scotland has so few trees.” | [
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acf-co24-10-13_1 | A complement to this process requires firms to “fine-tune,” “acquire,” and “integrate,” per Anna Bergek’s analysis of Keith Pavitt’s coinage. | [
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acf-co24-10-13_2 | This process is the title inspiration for a paper whose model was extended by the Akcigit–Kerr and Klette–Kortum models to account for internal and external forces. | [
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acf-co24-10-13_3 | This process partly titles a landmark 1992 paper that, in contrast to Romer, combines the impact of both the “knowledge spillover effect” and negative externalities. | [
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acf-co24-10-13_4 | Endogenous stochastic growth was modeled “through” this process in a paper by Aghion and Howitt. | [
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acf-co24-10-13_5 | This process is described as an “essential fact about capitalism” that “revolutionizes the economic structure from within,” and compared to a “gale” in the book Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy. | [
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] | acf-co24-10-13 | 5 | A complement to this process requires firms to “fine-tune,” “acquire,” and “integrate,” per Anna Bergek’s analysis of Keith Pavitt’s coinage. This process is the title inspiration for a paper whose model was extended by the Akcigit–Kerr and Klette–Kortum models to account for internal and external forces. This process partly titles a landmark 1992 paper that, in contrast to Romer, combines the impact of both the “knowledge spillover effect” and negative externalities. Endogenous stochastic growth was modeled “through” this process in a paper by Aghion and Howitt. This process is described as an “essential fact about capitalism” that “revolutionizes the economic structure from within,” and compared to a “gale” in the book Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy. For 10 points, name this process described by Joseph Schumpeter in which new innovations render old ones obsolete. | creative destruction [or schöpferische Zerstörung; accept Schumpeter’s gale until “gale” is read; reject innovation or R&D] (Keith Pavitt coined “creative accumulation.”) | [
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acf-co24-10-13_6 | For 10 points, name this process described by Joseph Schumpeter in which new innovations render old ones obsolete. | [
"schöpferische Zerstörung",
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"Schumpeter’s gale until gale is read; reject innovation",
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acf-co24-10-14_1 | A leader broke a gag rule about this island by delivering an elegy in the persona of a mad herald, and later misquoted the Catalog of Ships to support his city’s ownership of it. | [
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acf-co24-10-14_2 | A depiction of accounting on the Darius Vase is corroborated by a tablet from this island, the oldest surviving counting board. | [
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acf-co24-10-14_3 | A cult on this island centered on a cave that the antisocial playwright Euripides fled to. | [
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"Battle of Salamis",
"Salamis Tablet"
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acf-co24-10-14_4 | Plutarch claims that Xanthippus’s dog swam to this island after old people were evacuated to it via a decree preserved at Troezen. | [
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"Salamis Tablet"
] | acf-co24-10-14 | 4 | A leader broke a gag rule about this island by delivering an elegy in the persona of a mad herald, and later misquoted the Catalog of Ships to support his city’s ownership of it. A depiction of accounting on the Darius Vase is corroborated by a tablet from this island, the oldest surviving counting board. A cult on this island centered on a cave that the antisocial playwright Euripides fled to. Plutarch claims that Xanthippus’s dog swam to this island after old people were evacuated to it via a decree preserved at Troezen. This island was held by Megara until Athens seized it under Solon. In one account, a fleet entered a strait named for this island due to false intel from the slave Sicinnus. A battle named for this island supposedly occurred the same day as the Battle of Himera and fulfilled a prophecy about “wooden walls.” For 10 points, what island names a naval battle where Themistocles defeated Xerxes’s fleet? | Salamis [accept Salamis Tablet or Battle of Salamis] | [
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acf-co24-10-14_5 | This island was held by Megara until Athens seized it under Solon. | [
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"Salamis Tablet"
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acf-co24-10-14_6 | In one account, a fleet entered a strait named for this island due to false intel from the slave Sicinnus. | [
"Salamis",
"Battle of Salamis",
"Salamis Tablet"
] | acf-co24-10-14 | 6 | A leader broke a gag rule about this island by delivering an elegy in the persona of a mad herald, and later misquoted the Catalog of Ships to support his city’s ownership of it. A depiction of accounting on the Darius Vase is corroborated by a tablet from this island, the oldest surviving counting board. A cult on this island centered on a cave that the antisocial playwright Euripides fled to. Plutarch claims that Xanthippus’s dog swam to this island after old people were evacuated to it via a decree preserved at Troezen. This island was held by Megara until Athens seized it under Solon. In one account, a fleet entered a strait named for this island due to false intel from the slave Sicinnus. A battle named for this island supposedly occurred the same day as the Battle of Himera and fulfilled a prophecy about “wooden walls.” For 10 points, what island names a naval battle where Themistocles defeated Xerxes’s fleet? | Salamis [accept Salamis Tablet or Battle of Salamis] | [
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acf-co24-10-14_7 | A battle named for this island supposedly occurred the same day as the Battle of Himera and fulfilled a prophecy about “wooden walls.” | [
"Salamis",
"Battle of Salamis",
"Salamis Tablet"
] | acf-co24-10-14 | 7 | A leader broke a gag rule about this island by delivering an elegy in the persona of a mad herald, and later misquoted the Catalog of Ships to support his city’s ownership of it. A depiction of accounting on the Darius Vase is corroborated by a tablet from this island, the oldest surviving counting board. A cult on this island centered on a cave that the antisocial playwright Euripides fled to. Plutarch claims that Xanthippus’s dog swam to this island after old people were evacuated to it via a decree preserved at Troezen. This island was held by Megara until Athens seized it under Solon. In one account, a fleet entered a strait named for this island due to false intel from the slave Sicinnus. A battle named for this island supposedly occurred the same day as the Battle of Himera and fulfilled a prophecy about “wooden walls.” For 10 points, what island names a naval battle where Themistocles defeated Xerxes’s fleet? | Salamis [accept Salamis Tablet or Battle of Salamis] | [
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acf-co24-10-14_8 | For 10 points, what island names a naval battle where Themistocles defeated Xerxes’s fleet? | [
"Salamis",
"Battle of Salamis",
"Salamis Tablet"
] | acf-co24-10-14 | 8 | A leader broke a gag rule about this island by delivering an elegy in the persona of a mad herald, and later misquoted the Catalog of Ships to support his city’s ownership of it. A depiction of accounting on the Darius Vase is corroborated by a tablet from this island, the oldest surviving counting board. A cult on this island centered on a cave that the antisocial playwright Euripides fled to. Plutarch claims that Xanthippus’s dog swam to this island after old people were evacuated to it via a decree preserved at Troezen. This island was held by Megara until Athens seized it under Solon. In one account, a fleet entered a strait named for this island due to false intel from the slave Sicinnus. A battle named for this island supposedly occurred the same day as the Battle of Himera and fulfilled a prophecy about “wooden walls.” For 10 points, what island names a naval battle where Themistocles defeated Xerxes’s fleet? | Salamis [accept Salamis Tablet or Battle of Salamis] | [
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acf-co24-10-15_1 | DNA aptamers targeting this protein were used in the original version of FluMag-SELEX. | [
"avidin",
"NeutrAvidin",
"Avidin",
"streptavidin"
] | acf-co24-10-15 | 1 | DNA aptamers targeting this protein were used in the original version of FluMag-SELEX. This protein is tagged with a fluorophore and added to each MHC monomer in an MHC tetramer assay. Labeled DNA fragments are passed through beads containing this protein in the enrichment step of BLESS sequencing for double-strand DNA damage. It’s not histidine, but a synthetic eight-amino-acid peptide targeting a variant of this protein is used in a version of affinity chromatography in which it is tagged to recombinant proteins. Tryptophan residues line this protein’s binding pocket, which contains two shells of hydrogen bonding sites with its main ligand. This compound is frequently conjugated to horseradish peroxidase for use in western blots and ELISAs. For 10 points, name this protein used throughout molecular biology for its extremely high affinity for biotin. | avidin [or streptavidin or NeutrAvidin] | [
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acf-co24-10-15_2 | This protein is tagged with a fluorophore and added to each MHC monomer in an MHC tetramer assay. | [
"avidin",
"NeutrAvidin",
"Avidin",
"streptavidin"
] | acf-co24-10-15 | 2 | DNA aptamers targeting this protein were used in the original version of FluMag-SELEX. This protein is tagged with a fluorophore and added to each MHC monomer in an MHC tetramer assay. Labeled DNA fragments are passed through beads containing this protein in the enrichment step of BLESS sequencing for double-strand DNA damage. It’s not histidine, but a synthetic eight-amino-acid peptide targeting a variant of this protein is used in a version of affinity chromatography in which it is tagged to recombinant proteins. Tryptophan residues line this protein’s binding pocket, which contains two shells of hydrogen bonding sites with its main ligand. This compound is frequently conjugated to horseradish peroxidase for use in western blots and ELISAs. For 10 points, name this protein used throughout molecular biology for its extremely high affinity for biotin. | avidin [or streptavidin or NeutrAvidin] | [
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acf-co24-10-15_3 | Labeled DNA fragments are passed through beads containing this protein in the enrichment step of BLESS sequencing for double-strand DNA damage. | [
"avidin",
"NeutrAvidin",
"Avidin",
"streptavidin"
] | acf-co24-10-15 | 3 | DNA aptamers targeting this protein were used in the original version of FluMag-SELEX. This protein is tagged with a fluorophore and added to each MHC monomer in an MHC tetramer assay. Labeled DNA fragments are passed through beads containing this protein in the enrichment step of BLESS sequencing for double-strand DNA damage. It’s not histidine, but a synthetic eight-amino-acid peptide targeting a variant of this protein is used in a version of affinity chromatography in which it is tagged to recombinant proteins. Tryptophan residues line this protein’s binding pocket, which contains two shells of hydrogen bonding sites with its main ligand. This compound is frequently conjugated to horseradish peroxidase for use in western blots and ELISAs. For 10 points, name this protein used throughout molecular biology for its extremely high affinity for biotin. | avidin [or streptavidin or NeutrAvidin] | [
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acf-co24-10-15_4 | It’s not histidine, but a synthetic eight-amino-acid peptide targeting a variant of this protein is used in a version of affinity chromatography in which it is tagged to recombinant proteins. | [
"avidin",
"NeutrAvidin",
"Avidin",
"streptavidin"
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acf-co24-10-15_5 | Tryptophan residues line this protein’s binding pocket, which contains two shells of hydrogen bonding sites with its main ligand. | [
"avidin",
"NeutrAvidin",
"Avidin",
"streptavidin"
] | acf-co24-10-15 | 5 | DNA aptamers targeting this protein were used in the original version of FluMag-SELEX. This protein is tagged with a fluorophore and added to each MHC monomer in an MHC tetramer assay. Labeled DNA fragments are passed through beads containing this protein in the enrichment step of BLESS sequencing for double-strand DNA damage. It’s not histidine, but a synthetic eight-amino-acid peptide targeting a variant of this protein is used in a version of affinity chromatography in which it is tagged to recombinant proteins. Tryptophan residues line this protein’s binding pocket, which contains two shells of hydrogen bonding sites with its main ligand. This compound is frequently conjugated to horseradish peroxidase for use in western blots and ELISAs. For 10 points, name this protein used throughout molecular biology for its extremely high affinity for biotin. | avidin [or streptavidin or NeutrAvidin] | [
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86
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184
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[
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acf-co24-10-15_6 | This compound is frequently conjugated to horseradish peroxidase for use in western blots and ELISAs. | [
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acf-co24-10-15_7 | For 10 points, name this protein used throughout molecular biology for its extremely high affinity for biotin. | [
"avidin",
"NeutrAvidin",
"Avidin",
"streptavidin"
] | acf-co24-10-15 | 7 | DNA aptamers targeting this protein were used in the original version of FluMag-SELEX. This protein is tagged with a fluorophore and added to each MHC monomer in an MHC tetramer assay. Labeled DNA fragments are passed through beads containing this protein in the enrichment step of BLESS sequencing for double-strand DNA damage. It’s not histidine, but a synthetic eight-amino-acid peptide targeting a variant of this protein is used in a version of affinity chromatography in which it is tagged to recombinant proteins. Tryptophan residues line this protein’s binding pocket, which contains two shells of hydrogen bonding sites with its main ligand. This compound is frequently conjugated to horseradish peroxidase for use in western blots and ELISAs. For 10 points, name this protein used throughout molecular biology for its extremely high affinity for biotin. | avidin [or streptavidin or NeutrAvidin] | [
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"subcategory": [
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acf-co24-10-16_1 | A group of people with this job took its name from a “blue booklet” law granting exemption from military service, DG-307. | [
"guitarist",
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"guitarist singer",
"pop",
"guitarists, singers,",
"rock musicians",
"rockstars",
"pop artists",
"singer",
"rock"
] | acf-co24-10-16 | 1 | A group of people with this job took its name from a “blue booklet” law granting exemption from military service, DG-307. A person with this job was briefly made Special Ambassador for Trade and Tourism before Secretary of State James Baker flew in to demand he be fired. In an essay, the “far-reaching consequences” of the 1976 trial of people with this job is used to illustrate the impact of the “pre-political” act of “living within the truth.” People with this job influenced the mánička culture. A person with this job names a wall that was decorated with protest graffiti in the 1960s and inspired a wall of post-it notes in Hong Kong. As recounted in The Power of the Powerless, the trial of a group of people with this job inspired the signing of the Charter 77 manifesto. For 10 points, name this job of a group of Czech nonconformists called The Plastic People of the Universe, who were inspired by Frank Zappa. | rock musicians [or rock or pop artists; accept guitarists, singers, or rockstars; prompt on artists or performers] | [
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"subcategory": [
"european-history"
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acf-co24-10-16_2 | A person with this job was briefly made Special Ambassador for Trade and Tourism before Secretary of State James Baker flew in to demand he be fired. | [
"guitarist",
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"guitarist singer",
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"singer",
"rock"
] | acf-co24-10-16 | 2 | A group of people with this job took its name from a “blue booklet” law granting exemption from military service, DG-307. A person with this job was briefly made Special Ambassador for Trade and Tourism before Secretary of State James Baker flew in to demand he be fired. In an essay, the “far-reaching consequences” of the 1976 trial of people with this job is used to illustrate the impact of the “pre-political” act of “living within the truth.” People with this job influenced the mánička culture. A person with this job names a wall that was decorated with protest graffiti in the 1960s and inspired a wall of post-it notes in Hong Kong. As recounted in The Power of the Powerless, the trial of a group of people with this job inspired the signing of the Charter 77 manifesto. For 10 points, name this job of a group of Czech nonconformists called The Plastic People of the Universe, who were inspired by Frank Zappa. | rock musicians [or rock or pop artists; accept guitarists, singers, or rockstars; prompt on artists or performers] | [
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"subcategory": [
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acf-co24-10-16_3 | In an essay, the “far-reaching consequences” of the 1976 trial of people with this job is used to illustrate the impact of the “pre-political” act of “living within the truth.” | [
"guitarist",
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"guitarist singer",
"pop",
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"rockstars",
"pop artists",
"singer",
"rock"
] | acf-co24-10-16 | 3 | A group of people with this job took its name from a “blue booklet” law granting exemption from military service, DG-307. A person with this job was briefly made Special Ambassador for Trade and Tourism before Secretary of State James Baker flew in to demand he be fired. In an essay, the “far-reaching consequences” of the 1976 trial of people with this job is used to illustrate the impact of the “pre-political” act of “living within the truth.” People with this job influenced the mánička culture. A person with this job names a wall that was decorated with protest graffiti in the 1960s and inspired a wall of post-it notes in Hong Kong. As recounted in The Power of the Powerless, the trial of a group of people with this job inspired the signing of the Charter 77 manifesto. For 10 points, name this job of a group of Czech nonconformists called The Plastic People of the Universe, who were inspired by Frank Zappa. | rock musicians [or rock or pop artists; accept guitarists, singers, or rockstars; prompt on artists or performers] | [
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acf-co24-10-16_4 | People with this job influenced the mánička culture. | [
"guitarist",
"musician",
"guitarist singer",
"pop",
"guitarists, singers,",
"rock musicians",
"rockstars",
"pop artists",
"singer",
"rock"
] | acf-co24-10-16 | 4 | A group of people with this job took its name from a “blue booklet” law granting exemption from military service, DG-307. A person with this job was briefly made Special Ambassador for Trade and Tourism before Secretary of State James Baker flew in to demand he be fired. In an essay, the “far-reaching consequences” of the 1976 trial of people with this job is used to illustrate the impact of the “pre-political” act of “living within the truth.” People with this job influenced the mánička culture. A person with this job names a wall that was decorated with protest graffiti in the 1960s and inspired a wall of post-it notes in Hong Kong. As recounted in The Power of the Powerless, the trial of a group of people with this job inspired the signing of the Charter 77 manifesto. For 10 points, name this job of a group of Czech nonconformists called The Plastic People of the Universe, who were inspired by Frank Zappa. | rock musicians [or rock or pop artists; accept guitarists, singers, or rockstars; prompt on artists or performers] | [
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503,
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782
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[
783,
923
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acf-co24-10-16_5 | A person with this job names a wall that was decorated with protest graffiti in the 1960s and inspired a wall of post-it notes in Hong Kong. | [
"guitarist",
"musician",
"guitarist singer",
"pop",
"guitarists, singers,",
"rock musicians",
"rockstars",
"pop artists",
"singer",
"rock"
] | acf-co24-10-16 | 5 | A group of people with this job took its name from a “blue booklet” law granting exemption from military service, DG-307. A person with this job was briefly made Special Ambassador for Trade and Tourism before Secretary of State James Baker flew in to demand he be fired. In an essay, the “far-reaching consequences” of the 1976 trial of people with this job is used to illustrate the impact of the “pre-political” act of “living within the truth.” People with this job influenced the mánička culture. A person with this job names a wall that was decorated with protest graffiti in the 1960s and inspired a wall of post-it notes in Hong Kong. As recounted in The Power of the Powerless, the trial of a group of people with this job inspired the signing of the Charter 77 manifesto. For 10 points, name this job of a group of Czech nonconformists called The Plastic People of the Universe, who were inspired by Frank Zappa. | rock musicians [or rock or pop artists; accept guitarists, singers, or rockstars; prompt on artists or performers] | [
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acf-co24-10-16_6 | As recounted in The Power of the Powerless, the trial of a group of people with this job inspired the signing of the Charter 77 manifesto. | [
"guitarist",
"musician",
"guitarist singer",
"pop",
"guitarists, singers,",
"rock musicians",
"rockstars",
"pop artists",
"singer",
"rock"
] | acf-co24-10-16 | 6 | A group of people with this job took its name from a “blue booklet” law granting exemption from military service, DG-307. A person with this job was briefly made Special Ambassador for Trade and Tourism before Secretary of State James Baker flew in to demand he be fired. In an essay, the “far-reaching consequences” of the 1976 trial of people with this job is used to illustrate the impact of the “pre-political” act of “living within the truth.” People with this job influenced the mánička culture. A person with this job names a wall that was decorated with protest graffiti in the 1960s and inspired a wall of post-it notes in Hong Kong. As recounted in The Power of the Powerless, the trial of a group of people with this job inspired the signing of the Charter 77 manifesto. For 10 points, name this job of a group of Czech nonconformists called The Plastic People of the Universe, who were inspired by Frank Zappa. | rock musicians [or rock or pop artists; accept guitarists, singers, or rockstars; prompt on artists or performers] | [
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782
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acf-co24-10-16_7 | For 10 points, name this job of a group of Czech nonconformists called The Plastic People of the Universe, who were inspired by Frank Zappa. | [
"guitarist",
"musician",
"guitarist singer",
"pop",
"guitarists, singers,",
"rock musicians",
"rockstars",
"pop artists",
"singer",
"rock"
] | acf-co24-10-16 | 7 | A group of people with this job took its name from a “blue booklet” law granting exemption from military service, DG-307. A person with this job was briefly made Special Ambassador for Trade and Tourism before Secretary of State James Baker flew in to demand he be fired. In an essay, the “far-reaching consequences” of the 1976 trial of people with this job is used to illustrate the impact of the “pre-political” act of “living within the truth.” People with this job influenced the mánička culture. A person with this job names a wall that was decorated with protest graffiti in the 1960s and inspired a wall of post-it notes in Hong Kong. As recounted in The Power of the Powerless, the trial of a group of people with this job inspired the signing of the Charter 77 manifesto. For 10 points, name this job of a group of Czech nonconformists called The Plastic People of the Universe, who were inspired by Frank Zappa. | rock musicians [or rock or pop artists; accept guitarists, singers, or rockstars; prompt on artists or performers] | [
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acf-co24-10-17_1 | A director from one of these two countries took advantage of the other’s lax censorship to make the erotic anthology Immoral Tales. | [
"Polska Poland",
"Poland",
"France",
"République française in place of France",
"French Republic",
"Polska",
"française",
"Poland France",
"French",
"Polska, Republic of Poland,",
"Poland AND France",
"Rzeczpospolita Polska in place of Poland"
] | acf-co24-10-17 | 1 | A director from one of these two countries took advantage of the other’s lax censorship to make the erotic anthology Immoral Tales. In a film set in these two countries, a green-tinged sequence depicts a teacher watching a marionette show. In another film, a seemingly-irrelevant shot of a suitcase at an airport is revealed to contain a man smuggling himself from one of these countries to the other. En route to meeting a lawyer, a film’s protagonist stumbles upon two hairdressers from these two countries divorcing due to the husband’s impotence. In a film scored by a composer with the surname Preisner, a soprano and music teacher from these two countries are both played by Irène Jacob. A director from one of these two countries used a film about a composer’s grieving widow to begin a series themed on the other’s flag. For 10 points, name these two European countries that produced the Three Colours trilogy. | Poland AND France [accept Polska, Republic of Poland, or Rzeczpospolita Polska in place of “Poland”; accept French Republic or République française in place of “France”] (Walerian Borowczyk directed Immortal Tales. The other films mentioned are, in order: Three Colours: White, The Double Life of Veronique, and Three Colours: Blue, all directed by Krzysztof Kieślowski and scored by Zbigniew Preisner.) | [
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acf-co24-10-17_2 | In a film set in these two countries, a green-tinged sequence depicts a teacher watching a marionette show. | [
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acf-co24-10-17_3 | In another film, a seemingly-irrelevant shot of a suitcase at an airport is revealed to contain a man smuggling himself from one of these countries to the other. | [
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acf-co24-10-17_4 | En route to meeting a lawyer, a film’s protagonist stumbles upon two hairdressers from these two countries divorcing due to the husband’s impotence. | [
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acf-co24-10-17_5 | In a film scored by a composer with the surname Preisner, a soprano and music teacher from these two countries are both played by Irène Jacob. | [
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acf-co24-10-17_6 | A director from one of these two countries used a film about a composer’s grieving widow to begin a series themed on the other’s flag. | [
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acf-co24-10-17_7 | For 10 points, name these two European countries that produced the Three Colours trilogy. | [
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acf-co24-10-18_1 | This sort of place titles a short story in which a laborer and a street-cleaner both get stomach poisoning after eating mushrooms by a tram stop. | [
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acf-co24-10-18_3 | In a book titled for these places, a man asks, “Why do you speak to me of the stones? It is only the arch that matters,” to which his companion replies, “Without stones there is no arch.” | [
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acf-co24-10-18_4 | A book named for these places ends with the narrator outlining two ways to escape suffering in “the inferno of the living.” | [
"City",
"Cities",
"cities",
"city",
"the city; Mushrooms in the City",
"città",
"Funghi in città",
"Le città invisibili",
"Invisible Cities",
"city City"
] | acf-co24-10-18 | 4 | This sort of place titles a short story in which a laborer and a street-cleaner both get stomach poisoning after eating mushrooms by a tram stop. A short story collection subtitled for “seasons” in this sort of place is structured as five years of Marcovaldo’s life. In a book titled for these places, a man asks, “Why do you speak to me of the stones? It is only the arch that matters,” to which his companion replies, “Without stones there is no arch.” A book named for these places ends with the narrator outlining two ways to escape suffering in “the inferno of the living.” The “hooded brothers” duplicate one of these places underground by posing corpses. These places are paired with “Memory,” “Desire,” and “Signs” in the chapter titles of a novel in which they have female names like Eusapia and Diomira. For 10 points, Marco Polo tells Kublai Khan about what title places of an Italo Calvino novel? | cities [or the city; “Mushrooms in the City” or “Funghi in città”; accept Invisible Cities or Le città invisibili] | [
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acf-co24-10-18_5 | The “hooded brothers” duplicate one of these places underground by posing corpses. | [
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"Cities",
"cities",
"city",
"the city; Mushrooms in the City",
"città",
"Funghi in città",
"Le città invisibili",
"Invisible Cities",
"city City"
] | acf-co24-10-18 | 5 | This sort of place titles a short story in which a laborer and a street-cleaner both get stomach poisoning after eating mushrooms by a tram stop. A short story collection subtitled for “seasons” in this sort of place is structured as five years of Marcovaldo’s life. In a book titled for these places, a man asks, “Why do you speak to me of the stones? It is only the arch that matters,” to which his companion replies, “Without stones there is no arch.” A book named for these places ends with the narrator outlining two ways to escape suffering in “the inferno of the living.” The “hooded brothers” duplicate one of these places underground by posing corpses. These places are paired with “Memory,” “Desire,” and “Signs” in the chapter titles of a novel in which they have female names like Eusapia and Diomira. For 10 points, Marco Polo tells Kublai Khan about what title places of an Italo Calvino novel? | cities [or the city; “Mushrooms in the City” or “Funghi in città”; accept Invisible Cities or Le città invisibili] | [
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acf-co24-10-18_6 | These places are paired with “Memory,” “Desire,” and “Signs” in the chapter titles of a novel in which they have female names like Eusapia and Diomira. | [
"City",
"Cities",
"cities",
"city",
"the city; Mushrooms in the City",
"città",
"Funghi in città",
"Le città invisibili",
"Invisible Cities",
"city City"
] | acf-co24-10-18 | 6 | This sort of place titles a short story in which a laborer and a street-cleaner both get stomach poisoning after eating mushrooms by a tram stop. A short story collection subtitled for “seasons” in this sort of place is structured as five years of Marcovaldo’s life. In a book titled for these places, a man asks, “Why do you speak to me of the stones? It is only the arch that matters,” to which his companion replies, “Without stones there is no arch.” A book named for these places ends with the narrator outlining two ways to escape suffering in “the inferno of the living.” The “hooded brothers” duplicate one of these places underground by posing corpses. These places are paired with “Memory,” “Desire,” and “Signs” in the chapter titles of a novel in which they have female names like Eusapia and Diomira. For 10 points, Marco Polo tells Kublai Khan about what title places of an Italo Calvino novel? | cities [or the city; “Mushrooms in the City” or “Funghi in città”; accept Invisible Cities or Le città invisibili] | [
[
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[
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266
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"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"european-literature"
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acf-co24-10-18_7 | For 10 points, Marco Polo tells Kublai Khan about what title places of an Italo Calvino novel? | [
"City",
"Cities",
"cities",
"city",
"the city; Mushrooms in the City",
"città",
"Funghi in città",
"Le città invisibili",
"Invisible Cities",
"city City"
] | acf-co24-10-18 | 7 | This sort of place titles a short story in which a laborer and a street-cleaner both get stomach poisoning after eating mushrooms by a tram stop. A short story collection subtitled for “seasons” in this sort of place is structured as five years of Marcovaldo’s life. In a book titled for these places, a man asks, “Why do you speak to me of the stones? It is only the arch that matters,” to which his companion replies, “Without stones there is no arch.” A book named for these places ends with the narrator outlining two ways to escape suffering in “the inferno of the living.” The “hooded brothers” duplicate one of these places underground by posing corpses. These places are paired with “Memory,” “Desire,” and “Signs” in the chapter titles of a novel in which they have female names like Eusapia and Diomira. For 10 points, Marco Polo tells Kublai Khan about what title places of an Italo Calvino novel? | cities [or the city; “Mushrooms in the City” or “Funghi in città”; accept Invisible Cities or Le città invisibili] | [
[
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145
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[
146,
266
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[
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[
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[
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[
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acf-co24-10-19_1 | A group named for “Young Christian” examples of these people gave rise to the Jocist movement and implemented the “See, Judge, Act” slogan of its founder Joseph Cardijn. | [
"workers",
"Worker worker",
"worker",
"Young Christian Workers, worker-priests,",
"Catholic Worker Movement",
"Worker"
] | acf-co24-10-19 | 1 | A group named for “Young Christian” examples of these people gave rise to the Jocist movement and implemented the “See, Judge, Act” slogan of its founder Joseph Cardijn. When hyphenated with “priest,” this sort of person names domestic missionaries that Emmanuel Suhard deployed in imitation of Jacques Loew’s work. The Sojourner Community drew on a movement named for these people that operated “houses of hospitality” and clashed with Francis Spellman at Calvary Cemetery in Queens. The founding of a movement named for these people is detailed in The Long Loneliness. Distributism influenced a newspaper named for this sort of person that has maintained its “penny a copy” price since Peter Maurin co-founded it at the height of the Great Depression. For 10 points, what people name a social-justice-oriented Catholic movement founded by Dorothy Day? | workers [accept Young Christian Workers, worker-priests, or Catholic Worker Movement; prompt on Catholics] | [
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acf-co24-10-19_2 | When hyphenated with “priest,” this sort of person names domestic missionaries that Emmanuel Suhard deployed in imitation of Jacques Loew’s work. | [
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acf-co24-10-19_3 | The Sojourner Community drew on a movement named for these people that operated “houses of hospitality” and clashed with Francis Spellman at Calvary Cemetery in Queens. | [
"workers",
"Worker worker",
"worker",
"Young Christian Workers, worker-priests,",
"Catholic Worker Movement",
"Worker"
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acf-co24-10-19_4 | The founding of a movement named for these people is detailed in The Long Loneliness. | [
"workers",
"Worker worker",
"worker",
"Young Christian Workers, worker-priests,",
"Catholic Worker Movement",
"Worker"
] | acf-co24-10-19 | 4 | A group named for “Young Christian” examples of these people gave rise to the Jocist movement and implemented the “See, Judge, Act” slogan of its founder Joseph Cardijn. When hyphenated with “priest,” this sort of person names domestic missionaries that Emmanuel Suhard deployed in imitation of Jacques Loew’s work. The Sojourner Community drew on a movement named for these people that operated “houses of hospitality” and clashed with Francis Spellman at Calvary Cemetery in Queens. The founding of a movement named for these people is detailed in The Long Loneliness. Distributism influenced a newspaper named for this sort of person that has maintained its “penny a copy” price since Peter Maurin co-founded it at the height of the Great Depression. For 10 points, what people name a social-justice-oriented Catholic movement founded by Dorothy Day? | workers [accept Young Christian Workers, worker-priests, or Catholic Worker Movement; prompt on Catholics] | [
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acf-co24-10-19_5 | Distributism influenced a newspaper named for this sort of person that has maintained its “penny a copy” price since Peter Maurin co-founded it at the height of the Great Depression. | [
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acf-co24-10-19_6 | For 10 points, what people name a social-justice-oriented Catholic movement founded by Dorothy Day? | [
"workers",
"Worker worker",
"worker",
"Young Christian Workers, worker-priests,",
"Catholic Worker Movement",
"Worker"
] | acf-co24-10-19 | 6 | A group named for “Young Christian” examples of these people gave rise to the Jocist movement and implemented the “See, Judge, Act” slogan of its founder Joseph Cardijn. When hyphenated with “priest,” this sort of person names domestic missionaries that Emmanuel Suhard deployed in imitation of Jacques Loew’s work. The Sojourner Community drew on a movement named for these people that operated “houses of hospitality” and clashed with Francis Spellman at Calvary Cemetery in Queens. The founding of a movement named for these people is detailed in The Long Loneliness. Distributism influenced a newspaper named for this sort of person that has maintained its “penny a copy” price since Peter Maurin co-founded it at the height of the Great Depression. For 10 points, what people name a social-justice-oriented Catholic movement founded by Dorothy Day? | workers [accept Young Christian Workers, worker-priests, or Catholic Worker Movement; prompt on Catholics] | [
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acf-co24-10-20_1 | This was the birth surname of an activist who danced in political one-woman street shows on UPenn’s campus before publicly self-immolating in 1996. | [
"Kathy Change",
"Kathleen Chang",
"Iris Shun-Ru Chang",
"Iris Chang",
"Change",
"Chang"
] | acf-co24-10-20 | 1 | This was the birth surname of an activist who danced in political one-woman street shows on UPenn’s campus before publicly self-immolating in 1996. An author with this surname, who frequently used the phrase “The Power of One,” wrote a profile of an aerospace engineer who was the target of a smear campaign after co-founding Caltech’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory. A park in San Jose honors an author with this surname who is the dedicatee of R. F. Kuang’s grimdark fantasy The Poppy War and a time-travel story by Ken Liu. Hate mail and death threats resulted in the 2004 suicide at age 36 of that author with this surname, who used her own grandparents and the diaries of Minnie Vautrin and John Rabe as sources for a 1997 bestseller that alleges thousands of mass murders were covered up by Japan’s government. For 10 points, give this surname of the historian who wrote The Rape of Nanking, Iris. | Chang [or Iris Chang; or Iris Shun-Ru Chang; accept Kathy Change; accept Kathleen Chang] (The other Iris Chang book mentioned is Thread of the Silkworm, which is about Qian Xuesen.) | [
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acf-co24-10-20_2 | An author with this surname, who frequently used the phrase “The Power of One,” wrote a profile of an aerospace engineer who was the target of a smear campaign after co-founding Caltech’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory. | [
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acf-co24-10-20_3 | A park in San Jose honors an author with this surname who is the dedicatee of R. F. Kuang’s grimdark fantasy The Poppy War and a time-travel story by Ken Liu. | [
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acf-co24-10-20_4 | Hate mail and death threats resulted in the 2004 suicide at age 36 of that author with this surname, who used her own grandparents and the diaries of Minnie Vautrin and John Rabe as sources for a 1997 bestseller that alleges thousands of mass murders were covered up by Japan’s government. | [
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"Chang"
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acf-co24-10-20_5 | For 10 points, give this surname of the historian who wrote The Rape of Nanking, Iris. | [
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"Chang"
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acf-co24-11-1_1 | This man’s wife was one of the few victims of a failed mass poisoning with arsenic-laced bread that aimed to bring down his government, the 1857 Esing Bakery incident. | [
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acf-co24-11-1_2 | Jeremy Bentham died in the arms of this disciple of his, who was often critiqued by Karl Marx for his proclamation that “Jesus Christ is free trade and free trade is Jesus Christ.” | [
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acf-co24-11-1_3 | This man negotiated with a father-and-son pair of ministers from the Persian Bunnag family to create a successor to the Burney Treaty. | [
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acf-co24-11-1_4 | As the fourth governor of Hong Kong, this man and his envoy Harry Parkes used the Arrow incident as a pretext to shell Canton, kicking off the Second Opium War. | [
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acf-co24-11-1_5 | This diplomat secured extraterritoriality and “most favored nation” status for Britain in a Treaty of Friendship and Commerce that was signed during Mongkut’s reign. | [
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acf-co24-11-1_6 | For 10 points, what British political economist’s namesake treaty “opened” Thailand? | [
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acf-co24-11-2_4 | This subject chromatically descends from G to low G after a rising C minor triad and leap from A-flat to low B. | [
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acf-co24-11-2_5 | A canon perpetuus on this theme notated with extra clefs is one of ten unsolved riddles gifted to an amateur flutist with a title page whose acrostic puns on a Latin word for “seek.” | [
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acf-co24-11-2_6 | A Prussian king challenged a composer to improvise a six-voice ricercar on this theme, which underlies a palindromic crab canon. | [
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acf-co24-11-2_7 | For 10 points, what theme by Frederick the Great inspired the contrapuntal BWV 1079 and Gödel, Escher, Bach? | [
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acf-co24-11-3_1 | As a man in this novel hides in a flower garden, he becomes madly jealous after the protagonist tells her husband she’s in love with a man she refuses to name, not realizing she means him. | [
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acf-co24-11-4_8 | For 10 points, what prison abolitionist and pioneer of carceral geography wrote Golden Gulag? | [
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acf-co24-11-5_1 | The mobster who bails the protagonist of Shantaram out of prison is based on a don of this ethnicity whose gang killed Dawood Ibrahim’s brother. | [
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acf-co24-11-5_2 | A pacifist “red-shirted” movement of this ethnicity opposed the partition of India under the leadership of an activist nicknamed the “Sarhadi,” or “Frontier” Gandhi. | [
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acf-co24-11-5_3 | A Rabindranath Tagore story about a fruit seller depicts Kolkata’s community of this ethnicity, who are known by a name following their nation’s capital with the suffix “wala.” | [
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"Pashtuns",
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acf-co24-11-5_4 | This ethnicity’s largest diaspora in India inhabit Uttar Pradesh’s Rohilkhand region. | [
"Pakhtuns",
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"Pakhtun",
"Pashtun",
"Pathans",
"Pashtuns",
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acf-co24-11-5_5 | This was the ethnicity of the assassin who killed Viceroy of India Lord Mayo, Sher Ali Afridi. | [
"Pakhtuns",
"Pashto",
"Pakhtun",
"Pashtun",
"Pathans",
"Pashtuns",
"Pathan"
] | acf-co24-11-5 | 5 | The mobster who bails the protagonist of Shantaram out of prison is based on a don of this ethnicity whose gang killed Dawood Ibrahim’s brother. A pacifist “red-shirted” movement of this ethnicity opposed the partition of India under the leadership of an activist nicknamed the “Sarhadi,” or “Frontier” Gandhi. A Rabindranath Tagore story about a fruit seller depicts Kolkata’s community of this ethnicity, who are known by a name following their nation’s capital with the suffix “wala.” This ethnicity’s largest diaspora in India inhabit Uttar Pradesh’s Rohilkhand region. This was the ethnicity of the assassin who killed Viceroy of India Lord Mayo, Sher Ali Afridi. This ethnicity addressed the partition with a 1947 loya jirga. The Indian street snack chapli kebabs originate from this ethnicity’s Peshawari cuisine. For 10 points, name this dominant tribal ethnic group of Afghanistan. | Pashtuns [or Pakhtuns; or Pathans; accept Pashto; prompt on Kabuliwala; prompt on Afghans or Afghanis until “Afghanistan” is read] (The Mumbai don is Karim Lala. The activist is Abdul Ghaffar Khan, who led the Khudai Khidmatgar movement.) | [
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acf-co24-11-5_6 | This ethnicity addressed the partition with a 1947 loya jirga. | [
"Pakhtuns",
"Pashto",
"Pakhtun",
"Pashtun",
"Pathans",
"Pashtuns",
"Pathan"
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acf-co24-11-5_7 | The Indian street snack chapli kebabs originate from this ethnicity’s Peshawari cuisine. | [
"Pakhtuns",
"Pashto",
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"Pashtun",
"Pathans",
"Pashtuns",
"Pathan"
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acf-co24-11-5_8 | For 10 points, name this dominant tribal ethnic group of Afghanistan. | [
"Pakhtuns",
"Pashto",
"Pakhtun",
"Pashtun",
"Pathans",
"Pashtuns",
"Pathan"
] | acf-co24-11-5 | 8 | The mobster who bails the protagonist of Shantaram out of prison is based on a don of this ethnicity whose gang killed Dawood Ibrahim’s brother. A pacifist “red-shirted” movement of this ethnicity opposed the partition of India under the leadership of an activist nicknamed the “Sarhadi,” or “Frontier” Gandhi. A Rabindranath Tagore story about a fruit seller depicts Kolkata’s community of this ethnicity, who are known by a name following their nation’s capital with the suffix “wala.” This ethnicity’s largest diaspora in India inhabit Uttar Pradesh’s Rohilkhand region. This was the ethnicity of the assassin who killed Viceroy of India Lord Mayo, Sher Ali Afridi. This ethnicity addressed the partition with a 1947 loya jirga. The Indian street snack chapli kebabs originate from this ethnicity’s Peshawari cuisine. For 10 points, name this dominant tribal ethnic group of Afghanistan. | Pashtuns [or Pakhtuns; or Pathans; accept Pashto; prompt on Kabuliwala; prompt on Afghans or Afghanis until “Afghanistan” is read] (The Mumbai don is Karim Lala. The activist is Abdul Ghaffar Khan, who led the Khudai Khidmatgar movement.) | [
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acf-co24-11-6_6 | This city’s working class citizens are the subjects of the films Threads and The Full Monty. | [
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acf-co24-11-6_8 | A 1913 discovery by Harry Brearley enabled this home city of Henry Bessemer to produce stainless cutlery. | [
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acf-co24-11-6_9 | For 10 points, name this “Steel City” in Yorkshire. | [
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