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acf-co24-12-16_1
One of these proteins binds the scaffold protein MNAR and is co-activated by each of the three p160 proteins, such as SRC-1.
[ "ERalpha", "ERbeta", "GPER1", "estrogen receptors", "ERs", "estrogen receptor", "ERalpha ERbeta", "ER", "ERalpha, ERbeta," ]
acf-co24-12-16
1
One of these proteins binds the scaffold protein MNAR and is co-activated by each of the three p160 proteins, such as SRC-1. Mutations in one of these proteins between residues 536 and 538 in helix 12 disrupt its binding domain and are particularly oncogenic. The presence of one of these proteins differentiates the cell line MCF7 from MCF10A. A G525R mutant of one of these proteins, which is sensitive to the metabolite 4-OHT, is commonly used to study embryonic-lethal genes since their expression can be controlled by administration of tamoxifen, which targets these proteins. The nuclear and membrane variants of these proteins each bind all four isoforms of their primary ligand, which are distinguished by their one to four hydroxyl groups. For 10 points, name these proteins that with HER2 and the progesterone receptor are commonly used to delineate breast cancer severity.
estrogen receptors [accept ERs; accept ERalpha, ERbeta, or GPER1]
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acf-co24-12-16_2
Mutations in one of these proteins between residues 536 and 538 in helix 12 disrupt its binding domain and are particularly oncogenic.
[ "ERalpha", "ERbeta", "GPER1", "estrogen receptors", "ERs", "estrogen receptor", "ERalpha ERbeta", "ER", "ERalpha, ERbeta," ]
acf-co24-12-16
2
One of these proteins binds the scaffold protein MNAR and is co-activated by each of the three p160 proteins, such as SRC-1. Mutations in one of these proteins between residues 536 and 538 in helix 12 disrupt its binding domain and are particularly oncogenic. The presence of one of these proteins differentiates the cell line MCF7 from MCF10A. A G525R mutant of one of these proteins, which is sensitive to the metabolite 4-OHT, is commonly used to study embryonic-lethal genes since their expression can be controlled by administration of tamoxifen, which targets these proteins. The nuclear and membrane variants of these proteins each bind all four isoforms of their primary ligand, which are distinguished by their one to four hydroxyl groups. For 10 points, name these proteins that with HER2 and the progesterone receptor are commonly used to delineate breast cancer severity.
estrogen receptors [accept ERs; accept ERalpha, ERbeta, or GPER1]
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acf-co24-12-16_3
The presence of one of these proteins differentiates the cell line MCF7 from MCF10A.
[ "ERalpha", "ERbeta", "GPER1", "estrogen receptors", "ERs", "estrogen receptor", "ERalpha ERbeta", "ER", "ERalpha, ERbeta," ]
acf-co24-12-16
3
One of these proteins binds the scaffold protein MNAR and is co-activated by each of the three p160 proteins, such as SRC-1. Mutations in one of these proteins between residues 536 and 538 in helix 12 disrupt its binding domain and are particularly oncogenic. The presence of one of these proteins differentiates the cell line MCF7 from MCF10A. A G525R mutant of one of these proteins, which is sensitive to the metabolite 4-OHT, is commonly used to study embryonic-lethal genes since their expression can be controlled by administration of tamoxifen, which targets these proteins. The nuclear and membrane variants of these proteins each bind all four isoforms of their primary ligand, which are distinguished by their one to four hydroxyl groups. For 10 points, name these proteins that with HER2 and the progesterone receptor are commonly used to delineate breast cancer severity.
estrogen receptors [accept ERs; accept ERalpha, ERbeta, or GPER1]
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acf-co24-12-16_4
A G525R mutant of one of these proteins, which is sensitive to the metabolite 4-OHT, is commonly used to study embryonic-lethal genes since their expression can be controlled by administration of tamoxifen, which targets these proteins.
[ "ERalpha", "ERbeta", "GPER1", "estrogen receptors", "ERs", "estrogen receptor", "ERalpha ERbeta", "ER", "ERalpha, ERbeta," ]
acf-co24-12-16
4
One of these proteins binds the scaffold protein MNAR and is co-activated by each of the three p160 proteins, such as SRC-1. Mutations in one of these proteins between residues 536 and 538 in helix 12 disrupt its binding domain and are particularly oncogenic. The presence of one of these proteins differentiates the cell line MCF7 from MCF10A. A G525R mutant of one of these proteins, which is sensitive to the metabolite 4-OHT, is commonly used to study embryonic-lethal genes since their expression can be controlled by administration of tamoxifen, which targets these proteins. The nuclear and membrane variants of these proteins each bind all four isoforms of their primary ligand, which are distinguished by their one to four hydroxyl groups. For 10 points, name these proteins that with HER2 and the progesterone receptor are commonly used to delineate breast cancer severity.
estrogen receptors [accept ERs; accept ERalpha, ERbeta, or GPER1]
[ [ 0, 124 ], [ 125, 259 ], [ 260, 344 ], [ 345, 582 ], [ 583, 749 ], [ 750, 884 ] ]
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acf-co24-12-16_5
The nuclear and membrane variants of these proteins each bind all four isoforms of their primary ligand, which are distinguished by their one to four hydroxyl groups.
[ "ERalpha", "ERbeta", "GPER1", "estrogen receptors", "ERs", "estrogen receptor", "ERalpha ERbeta", "ER", "ERalpha, ERbeta," ]
acf-co24-12-16
5
One of these proteins binds the scaffold protein MNAR and is co-activated by each of the three p160 proteins, such as SRC-1. Mutations in one of these proteins between residues 536 and 538 in helix 12 disrupt its binding domain and are particularly oncogenic. The presence of one of these proteins differentiates the cell line MCF7 from MCF10A. A G525R mutant of one of these proteins, which is sensitive to the metabolite 4-OHT, is commonly used to study embryonic-lethal genes since their expression can be controlled by administration of tamoxifen, which targets these proteins. The nuclear and membrane variants of these proteins each bind all four isoforms of their primary ligand, which are distinguished by their one to four hydroxyl groups. For 10 points, name these proteins that with HER2 and the progesterone receptor are commonly used to delineate breast cancer severity.
estrogen receptors [accept ERs; accept ERalpha, ERbeta, or GPER1]
[ [ 0, 124 ], [ 125, 259 ], [ 260, 344 ], [ 345, 582 ], [ 583, 749 ], [ 750, 884 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Biology", "category_main": "science-biology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 50, -5 ], [ 97, 10 ], [ 97, 10 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 132, -5 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 137, 10 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet L. Editors 6", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "biology" ] }
acf-co24-12-16_6
For 10 points, name these proteins that with HER2 and the progesterone receptor are commonly used to delineate breast cancer severity.
[ "ERalpha", "ERbeta", "GPER1", "estrogen receptors", "ERs", "estrogen receptor", "ERalpha ERbeta", "ER", "ERalpha, ERbeta," ]
acf-co24-12-16
6
One of these proteins binds the scaffold protein MNAR and is co-activated by each of the three p160 proteins, such as SRC-1. Mutations in one of these proteins between residues 536 and 538 in helix 12 disrupt its binding domain and are particularly oncogenic. The presence of one of these proteins differentiates the cell line MCF7 from MCF10A. A G525R mutant of one of these proteins, which is sensitive to the metabolite 4-OHT, is commonly used to study embryonic-lethal genes since their expression can be controlled by administration of tamoxifen, which targets these proteins. The nuclear and membrane variants of these proteins each bind all four isoforms of their primary ligand, which are distinguished by their one to four hydroxyl groups. For 10 points, name these proteins that with HER2 and the progesterone receptor are commonly used to delineate breast cancer severity.
estrogen receptors [accept ERs; accept ERalpha, ERbeta, or GPER1]
[ [ 0, 124 ], [ 125, 259 ], [ 260, 344 ], [ 345, 582 ], [ 583, 749 ], [ 750, 884 ] ]
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acf-co24-12-17_1
This concept titles a book that analyzes Disney’s plans for a slavery-themed park and ends with a crowd throwing a statue of Columbus into the sea.
[ "Silencing the Past", "pastness", "Past", "the past", "past", "usable past" ]
acf-co24-12-17
1
This concept titles a book that analyzes Disney’s plans for a slavery-themed park and ends with a crowd throwing a statue of Columbus into the sea. Van Wyck Brooks wrote that this concept’s “inexhaustible storehouse of apt attitudes” makes it “usable.” An emotion aimed at this concept is instead paired with this concept’s opposite in the title of a 2001 Svetlana Boym book. Building on William James, Carl Becker argued that we “rob” this concept to create its successor’s “specious” form. The “silencing” of this concept was studied by Michel-Rolph Trouillot. Barack Obama’s “A More Perfect Union” speech paraphrased a remark about this concept from Requiem for a Nun. The first sentence of L. P. Hartley’s The Go-Between calls this concept a “foreign country” where “they do things differently.” For 10 points, name this concept that William Faulkner wrote is “never dead. It’s not even” this concept.
the past [or pastness; accept Silencing the Past or usable past] (The Boym book is The Future of Nostalgia. Carl Becker’s remark on “robbing the past” to create the “specious present” appears in “Everyman his Own Historian.”)
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acf-co24-12-17_2
Van Wyck Brooks wrote that this concept’s “inexhaustible storehouse of apt attitudes” makes it “usable.”
[ "Silencing the Past", "pastness", "Past", "the past", "past", "usable past" ]
acf-co24-12-17
2
This concept titles a book that analyzes Disney’s plans for a slavery-themed park and ends with a crowd throwing a statue of Columbus into the sea. Van Wyck Brooks wrote that this concept’s “inexhaustible storehouse of apt attitudes” makes it “usable.” An emotion aimed at this concept is instead paired with this concept’s opposite in the title of a 2001 Svetlana Boym book. Building on William James, Carl Becker argued that we “rob” this concept to create its successor’s “specious” form. The “silencing” of this concept was studied by Michel-Rolph Trouillot. Barack Obama’s “A More Perfect Union” speech paraphrased a remark about this concept from Requiem for a Nun. The first sentence of L. P. Hartley’s The Go-Between calls this concept a “foreign country” where “they do things differently.” For 10 points, name this concept that William Faulkner wrote is “never dead. It’s not even” this concept.
the past [or pastness; accept Silencing the Past or usable past] (The Boym book is The Future of Nostalgia. Carl Becker’s remark on “robbing the past” to create the “specious present” appears in “Everyman his Own Historian.”)
[ [ 0, 147 ], [ 148, 252 ], [ 253, 375 ], [ 376, 491 ], [ 492, 563 ], [ 564, 672 ], [ 673, 800 ], [ 801, 906 ] ]
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acf-co24-12-17_3
An emotion aimed at this concept is instead paired with this concept’s opposite in the title of a 2001 Svetlana Boym book.
[ "Silencing the Past", "pastness", "Past", "the past", "past", "usable past" ]
acf-co24-12-17
3
This concept titles a book that analyzes Disney’s plans for a slavery-themed park and ends with a crowd throwing a statue of Columbus into the sea. Van Wyck Brooks wrote that this concept’s “inexhaustible storehouse of apt attitudes” makes it “usable.” An emotion aimed at this concept is instead paired with this concept’s opposite in the title of a 2001 Svetlana Boym book. Building on William James, Carl Becker argued that we “rob” this concept to create its successor’s “specious” form. The “silencing” of this concept was studied by Michel-Rolph Trouillot. Barack Obama’s “A More Perfect Union” speech paraphrased a remark about this concept from Requiem for a Nun. The first sentence of L. P. Hartley’s The Go-Between calls this concept a “foreign country” where “they do things differently.” For 10 points, name this concept that William Faulkner wrote is “never dead. It’s not even” this concept.
the past [or pastness; accept Silencing the Past or usable past] (The Boym book is The Future of Nostalgia. Carl Becker’s remark on “robbing the past” to create the “specious present” appears in “Everyman his Own Historian.”)
[ [ 0, 147 ], [ 148, 252 ], [ 253, 375 ], [ 376, 491 ], [ 492, 563 ], [ 564, 672 ], [ 673, 800 ], [ 801, 906 ] ]
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acf-co24-12-17_4
Building on William James, Carl Becker argued that we “rob” this concept to create its successor’s “specious” form.
[ "Silencing the Past", "pastness", "Past", "the past", "past", "usable past" ]
acf-co24-12-17
4
This concept titles a book that analyzes Disney’s plans for a slavery-themed park and ends with a crowd throwing a statue of Columbus into the sea. Van Wyck Brooks wrote that this concept’s “inexhaustible storehouse of apt attitudes” makes it “usable.” An emotion aimed at this concept is instead paired with this concept’s opposite in the title of a 2001 Svetlana Boym book. Building on William James, Carl Becker argued that we “rob” this concept to create its successor’s “specious” form. The “silencing” of this concept was studied by Michel-Rolph Trouillot. Barack Obama’s “A More Perfect Union” speech paraphrased a remark about this concept from Requiem for a Nun. The first sentence of L. P. Hartley’s The Go-Between calls this concept a “foreign country” where “they do things differently.” For 10 points, name this concept that William Faulkner wrote is “never dead. It’s not even” this concept.
the past [or pastness; accept Silencing the Past or usable past] (The Boym book is The Future of Nostalgia. Carl Becker’s remark on “robbing the past” to create the “specious present” appears in “Everyman his Own Historian.”)
[ [ 0, 147 ], [ 148, 252 ], [ 253, 375 ], [ 376, 491 ], [ 492, 563 ], [ 564, 672 ], [ 673, 800 ], [ 801, 906 ] ]
{ "category": "other-academic", "category_full": "Other Academic - Other Academic", "category_main": "other-academic", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 62, 15 ], [ 89, 10 ], [ 90, 10 ], [ 90, 10 ], [ 90, 10 ], [ 90, 10 ], [ 92, -5 ], [ 92, 10 ], [ 92, 10 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 117, -5 ], [ 118, 10 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet L. Editors 6", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-academic" ] }
acf-co24-12-17_5
The “silencing” of this concept was studied by Michel-Rolph Trouillot.
[ "Silencing the Past", "pastness", "Past", "the past", "past", "usable past" ]
acf-co24-12-17
5
This concept titles a book that analyzes Disney’s plans for a slavery-themed park and ends with a crowd throwing a statue of Columbus into the sea. Van Wyck Brooks wrote that this concept’s “inexhaustible storehouse of apt attitudes” makes it “usable.” An emotion aimed at this concept is instead paired with this concept’s opposite in the title of a 2001 Svetlana Boym book. Building on William James, Carl Becker argued that we “rob” this concept to create its successor’s “specious” form. The “silencing” of this concept was studied by Michel-Rolph Trouillot. Barack Obama’s “A More Perfect Union” speech paraphrased a remark about this concept from Requiem for a Nun. The first sentence of L. P. Hartley’s The Go-Between calls this concept a “foreign country” where “they do things differently.” For 10 points, name this concept that William Faulkner wrote is “never dead. It’s not even” this concept.
the past [or pastness; accept Silencing the Past or usable past] (The Boym book is The Future of Nostalgia. Carl Becker’s remark on “robbing the past” to create the “specious present” appears in “Everyman his Own Historian.”)
[ [ 0, 147 ], [ 148, 252 ], [ 253, 375 ], [ 376, 491 ], [ 492, 563 ], [ 564, 672 ], [ 673, 800 ], [ 801, 906 ] ]
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acf-co24-12-17_6
Barack Obama’s “A More Perfect Union” speech paraphrased a remark about this concept from Requiem for a Nun.
[ "Silencing the Past", "pastness", "Past", "the past", "past", "usable past" ]
acf-co24-12-17
6
This concept titles a book that analyzes Disney’s plans for a slavery-themed park and ends with a crowd throwing a statue of Columbus into the sea. Van Wyck Brooks wrote that this concept’s “inexhaustible storehouse of apt attitudes” makes it “usable.” An emotion aimed at this concept is instead paired with this concept’s opposite in the title of a 2001 Svetlana Boym book. Building on William James, Carl Becker argued that we “rob” this concept to create its successor’s “specious” form. The “silencing” of this concept was studied by Michel-Rolph Trouillot. Barack Obama’s “A More Perfect Union” speech paraphrased a remark about this concept from Requiem for a Nun. The first sentence of L. P. Hartley’s The Go-Between calls this concept a “foreign country” where “they do things differently.” For 10 points, name this concept that William Faulkner wrote is “never dead. It’s not even” this concept.
the past [or pastness; accept Silencing the Past or usable past] (The Boym book is The Future of Nostalgia. Carl Becker’s remark on “robbing the past” to create the “specious present” appears in “Everyman his Own Historian.”)
[ [ 0, 147 ], [ 148, 252 ], [ 253, 375 ], [ 376, 491 ], [ 492, 563 ], [ 564, 672 ], [ 673, 800 ], [ 801, 906 ] ]
{ "category": "other-academic", "category_full": "Other Academic - Other Academic", "category_main": "other-academic", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 62, 15 ], [ 89, 10 ], [ 90, 10 ], [ 90, 10 ], [ 90, 10 ], [ 90, 10 ], [ 92, -5 ], [ 92, 10 ], [ 92, 10 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 117, -5 ], [ 118, 10 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet L. Editors 6", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-academic" ] }
acf-co24-12-17_7
The first sentence of L. P. Hartley’s The Go-Between calls this concept a “foreign country” where “they do things differently.”
[ "Silencing the Past", "pastness", "Past", "the past", "past", "usable past" ]
acf-co24-12-17
7
This concept titles a book that analyzes Disney’s plans for a slavery-themed park and ends with a crowd throwing a statue of Columbus into the sea. Van Wyck Brooks wrote that this concept’s “inexhaustible storehouse of apt attitudes” makes it “usable.” An emotion aimed at this concept is instead paired with this concept’s opposite in the title of a 2001 Svetlana Boym book. Building on William James, Carl Becker argued that we “rob” this concept to create its successor’s “specious” form. The “silencing” of this concept was studied by Michel-Rolph Trouillot. Barack Obama’s “A More Perfect Union” speech paraphrased a remark about this concept from Requiem for a Nun. The first sentence of L. P. Hartley’s The Go-Between calls this concept a “foreign country” where “they do things differently.” For 10 points, name this concept that William Faulkner wrote is “never dead. It’s not even” this concept.
the past [or pastness; accept Silencing the Past or usable past] (The Boym book is The Future of Nostalgia. Carl Becker’s remark on “robbing the past” to create the “specious present” appears in “Everyman his Own Historian.”)
[ [ 0, 147 ], [ 148, 252 ], [ 253, 375 ], [ 376, 491 ], [ 492, 563 ], [ 564, 672 ], [ 673, 800 ], [ 801, 906 ] ]
{ "category": "other-academic", "category_full": "Other Academic - Other Academic", "category_main": "other-academic", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 62, 15 ], [ 89, 10 ], [ 90, 10 ], [ 90, 10 ], [ 90, 10 ], [ 90, 10 ], [ 92, -5 ], [ 92, 10 ], [ 92, 10 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 117, -5 ], [ 118, 10 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet L. Editors 6", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-academic" ] }
acf-co24-12-17_8
For 10 points, name this concept that William Faulkner wrote is “never dead. It’s not even” this concept.
[ "Silencing the Past", "pastness", "Past", "the past", "past", "usable past" ]
acf-co24-12-17
8
This concept titles a book that analyzes Disney’s plans for a slavery-themed park and ends with a crowd throwing a statue of Columbus into the sea. Van Wyck Brooks wrote that this concept’s “inexhaustible storehouse of apt attitudes” makes it “usable.” An emotion aimed at this concept is instead paired with this concept’s opposite in the title of a 2001 Svetlana Boym book. Building on William James, Carl Becker argued that we “rob” this concept to create its successor’s “specious” form. The “silencing” of this concept was studied by Michel-Rolph Trouillot. Barack Obama’s “A More Perfect Union” speech paraphrased a remark about this concept from Requiem for a Nun. The first sentence of L. P. Hartley’s The Go-Between calls this concept a “foreign country” where “they do things differently.” For 10 points, name this concept that William Faulkner wrote is “never dead. It’s not even” this concept.
the past [or pastness; accept Silencing the Past or usable past] (The Boym book is The Future of Nostalgia. Carl Becker’s remark on “robbing the past” to create the “specious present” appears in “Everyman his Own Historian.”)
[ [ 0, 147 ], [ 148, 252 ], [ 253, 375 ], [ 376, 491 ], [ 492, 563 ], [ 564, 672 ], [ 673, 800 ], [ 801, 906 ] ]
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acf-co24-12-18_1
In a short story set in this city, Philemon humiliates his adulterous wife Matilda by forcing her to treat the suit that her lover left behind like a real person.
[ "Sophiatown until read, but", "Joburg", "Sophiatown", "Johannesburg" ]
acf-co24-12-18
1
In a short story set in this city, Philemon humiliates his adulterous wife Matilda by forcing her to treat the suit that her lover left behind like a real person. A baboon terrorizes this city in the story “Something Out There.” Langston Hughes was a pen pal of many writers for this city’s Drum magazine, such as an actor nicknamed “Bloke,” a journalist who composed a jazz opera about the boxer King Kong, and the novelist of Mating Birds. In a story set in this city, a golfer watches an old man collapse while carrying what he thought was his son’s coffin. An author from a suburb of this city outlined “How [her country’s] Censorship Works” in an essay whose title asks, “What Happened to” one of her novels. That author, who was part of this city’s Sophiatown Renaissance, wrote the short story “Six Feet of the Country.” For 10 points, name this city home to the author of Burger’s Daughter, Nadine Gordimer.
Johannesburg [or Joburg; accept Sophiatown until read, but prompt afterwards; prompt on Springs] (The short story in the first line is “The Suit” by Can Themba. The Drum writers are Bloke Modisane, Lewis Nkosi, and Todd Matshikiza.)
[ [ 0, 162 ], [ 163, 228 ], [ 229, 441 ], [ 442, 561 ], [ 562, 714 ], [ 715, 828 ], [ 829, 916 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - World Literature", "category_main": "literature-world-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 40, 15 ], [ 52, -5 ], [ 54, -5 ], [ 59, 15 ], [ 85, -5 ], [ 118, 10 ], [ 121, -5 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 137, 10 ], [ 160, 10 ], [ 161, 10 ], [ 163, 0 ], [ 163, 0 ], [ 163, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet L. Editors 6", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "world-literature" ] }
acf-co24-12-18_2
A baboon terrorizes this city in the story “Something Out There.”
[ "Sophiatown until read, but", "Joburg", "Sophiatown", "Johannesburg" ]
acf-co24-12-18
2
In a short story set in this city, Philemon humiliates his adulterous wife Matilda by forcing her to treat the suit that her lover left behind like a real person. A baboon terrorizes this city in the story “Something Out There.” Langston Hughes was a pen pal of many writers for this city’s Drum magazine, such as an actor nicknamed “Bloke,” a journalist who composed a jazz opera about the boxer King Kong, and the novelist of Mating Birds. In a story set in this city, a golfer watches an old man collapse while carrying what he thought was his son’s coffin. An author from a suburb of this city outlined “How [her country’s] Censorship Works” in an essay whose title asks, “What Happened to” one of her novels. That author, who was part of this city’s Sophiatown Renaissance, wrote the short story “Six Feet of the Country.” For 10 points, name this city home to the author of Burger’s Daughter, Nadine Gordimer.
Johannesburg [or Joburg; accept Sophiatown until read, but prompt afterwards; prompt on Springs] (The short story in the first line is “The Suit” by Can Themba. The Drum writers are Bloke Modisane, Lewis Nkosi, and Todd Matshikiza.)
[ [ 0, 162 ], [ 163, 228 ], [ 229, 441 ], [ 442, 561 ], [ 562, 714 ], [ 715, 828 ], [ 829, 916 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - World Literature", "category_main": "literature-world-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 40, 15 ], [ 52, -5 ], [ 54, -5 ], [ 59, 15 ], [ 85, -5 ], [ 118, 10 ], [ 121, -5 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 137, 10 ], [ 160, 10 ], [ 161, 10 ], [ 163, 0 ], [ 163, 0 ], [ 163, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet L. Editors 6", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "world-literature" ] }
acf-co24-12-18_3
Langston Hughes was a pen pal of many writers for this city’s Drum magazine, such as an actor nicknamed “Bloke,” a journalist who composed a jazz opera about the boxer King Kong, and the novelist of Mating Birds.
[ "Sophiatown until read, but", "Joburg", "Sophiatown", "Johannesburg" ]
acf-co24-12-18
3
In a short story set in this city, Philemon humiliates his adulterous wife Matilda by forcing her to treat the suit that her lover left behind like a real person. A baboon terrorizes this city in the story “Something Out There.” Langston Hughes was a pen pal of many writers for this city’s Drum magazine, such as an actor nicknamed “Bloke,” a journalist who composed a jazz opera about the boxer King Kong, and the novelist of Mating Birds. In a story set in this city, a golfer watches an old man collapse while carrying what he thought was his son’s coffin. An author from a suburb of this city outlined “How [her country’s] Censorship Works” in an essay whose title asks, “What Happened to” one of her novels. That author, who was part of this city’s Sophiatown Renaissance, wrote the short story “Six Feet of the Country.” For 10 points, name this city home to the author of Burger’s Daughter, Nadine Gordimer.
Johannesburg [or Joburg; accept Sophiatown until read, but prompt afterwards; prompt on Springs] (The short story in the first line is “The Suit” by Can Themba. The Drum writers are Bloke Modisane, Lewis Nkosi, and Todd Matshikiza.)
[ [ 0, 162 ], [ 163, 228 ], [ 229, 441 ], [ 442, 561 ], [ 562, 714 ], [ 715, 828 ], [ 829, 916 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - World Literature", "category_main": "literature-world-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 40, 15 ], [ 52, -5 ], [ 54, -5 ], [ 59, 15 ], [ 85, -5 ], [ 118, 10 ], [ 121, -5 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 137, 10 ], [ 160, 10 ], [ 161, 10 ], [ 163, 0 ], [ 163, 0 ], [ 163, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet L. Editors 6", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "world-literature" ] }
acf-co24-12-18_4
In a story set in this city, a golfer watches an old man collapse while carrying what he thought was his son’s coffin.
[ "Sophiatown until read, but", "Joburg", "Sophiatown", "Johannesburg" ]
acf-co24-12-18
4
In a short story set in this city, Philemon humiliates his adulterous wife Matilda by forcing her to treat the suit that her lover left behind like a real person. A baboon terrorizes this city in the story “Something Out There.” Langston Hughes was a pen pal of many writers for this city’s Drum magazine, such as an actor nicknamed “Bloke,” a journalist who composed a jazz opera about the boxer King Kong, and the novelist of Mating Birds. In a story set in this city, a golfer watches an old man collapse while carrying what he thought was his son’s coffin. An author from a suburb of this city outlined “How [her country’s] Censorship Works” in an essay whose title asks, “What Happened to” one of her novels. That author, who was part of this city’s Sophiatown Renaissance, wrote the short story “Six Feet of the Country.” For 10 points, name this city home to the author of Burger’s Daughter, Nadine Gordimer.
Johannesburg [or Joburg; accept Sophiatown until read, but prompt afterwards; prompt on Springs] (The short story in the first line is “The Suit” by Can Themba. The Drum writers are Bloke Modisane, Lewis Nkosi, and Todd Matshikiza.)
[ [ 0, 162 ], [ 163, 228 ], [ 229, 441 ], [ 442, 561 ], [ 562, 714 ], [ 715, 828 ], [ 829, 916 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - World Literature", "category_main": "literature-world-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 40, 15 ], [ 52, -5 ], [ 54, -5 ], [ 59, 15 ], [ 85, -5 ], [ 118, 10 ], [ 121, -5 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 137, 10 ], [ 160, 10 ], [ 161, 10 ], [ 163, 0 ], [ 163, 0 ], [ 163, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet L. Editors 6", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "world-literature" ] }
acf-co24-12-18_5
An author from a suburb of this city outlined “How [her country’s] Censorship Works” in an essay whose title asks, “What Happened to” one of her novels.
[ "Sophiatown until read, but", "Joburg", "Sophiatown", "Johannesburg" ]
acf-co24-12-18
5
In a short story set in this city, Philemon humiliates his adulterous wife Matilda by forcing her to treat the suit that her lover left behind like a real person. A baboon terrorizes this city in the story “Something Out There.” Langston Hughes was a pen pal of many writers for this city’s Drum magazine, such as an actor nicknamed “Bloke,” a journalist who composed a jazz opera about the boxer King Kong, and the novelist of Mating Birds. In a story set in this city, a golfer watches an old man collapse while carrying what he thought was his son’s coffin. An author from a suburb of this city outlined “How [her country’s] Censorship Works” in an essay whose title asks, “What Happened to” one of her novels. That author, who was part of this city’s Sophiatown Renaissance, wrote the short story “Six Feet of the Country.” For 10 points, name this city home to the author of Burger’s Daughter, Nadine Gordimer.
Johannesburg [or Joburg; accept Sophiatown until read, but prompt afterwards; prompt on Springs] (The short story in the first line is “The Suit” by Can Themba. The Drum writers are Bloke Modisane, Lewis Nkosi, and Todd Matshikiza.)
[ [ 0, 162 ], [ 163, 228 ], [ 229, 441 ], [ 442, 561 ], [ 562, 714 ], [ 715, 828 ], [ 829, 916 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - World Literature", "category_main": "literature-world-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 40, 15 ], [ 52, -5 ], [ 54, -5 ], [ 59, 15 ], [ 85, -5 ], [ 118, 10 ], [ 121, -5 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 137, 10 ], [ 160, 10 ], [ 161, 10 ], [ 163, 0 ], [ 163, 0 ], [ 163, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet L. Editors 6", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "world-literature" ] }
acf-co24-12-18_6
That author, who was part of this city’s Sophiatown Renaissance, wrote the short story “Six Feet of the Country.”
[ "Sophiatown until read, but", "Joburg", "Sophiatown", "Johannesburg" ]
acf-co24-12-18
6
In a short story set in this city, Philemon humiliates his adulterous wife Matilda by forcing her to treat the suit that her lover left behind like a real person. A baboon terrorizes this city in the story “Something Out There.” Langston Hughes was a pen pal of many writers for this city’s Drum magazine, such as an actor nicknamed “Bloke,” a journalist who composed a jazz opera about the boxer King Kong, and the novelist of Mating Birds. In a story set in this city, a golfer watches an old man collapse while carrying what he thought was his son’s coffin. An author from a suburb of this city outlined “How [her country’s] Censorship Works” in an essay whose title asks, “What Happened to” one of her novels. That author, who was part of this city’s Sophiatown Renaissance, wrote the short story “Six Feet of the Country.” For 10 points, name this city home to the author of Burger’s Daughter, Nadine Gordimer.
Johannesburg [or Joburg; accept Sophiatown until read, but prompt afterwards; prompt on Springs] (The short story in the first line is “The Suit” by Can Themba. The Drum writers are Bloke Modisane, Lewis Nkosi, and Todd Matshikiza.)
[ [ 0, 162 ], [ 163, 228 ], [ 229, 441 ], [ 442, 561 ], [ 562, 714 ], [ 715, 828 ], [ 829, 916 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - World Literature", "category_main": "literature-world-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 40, 15 ], [ 52, -5 ], [ 54, -5 ], [ 59, 15 ], [ 85, -5 ], [ 118, 10 ], [ 121, -5 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 137, 10 ], [ 160, 10 ], [ 161, 10 ], [ 163, 0 ], [ 163, 0 ], [ 163, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet L. Editors 6", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "world-literature" ] }
acf-co24-12-18_7
For 10 points, name this city home to the author of Burger’s Daughter, Nadine Gordimer.
[ "Sophiatown until read, but", "Joburg", "Sophiatown", "Johannesburg" ]
acf-co24-12-18
7
In a short story set in this city, Philemon humiliates his adulterous wife Matilda by forcing her to treat the suit that her lover left behind like a real person. A baboon terrorizes this city in the story “Something Out There.” Langston Hughes was a pen pal of many writers for this city’s Drum magazine, such as an actor nicknamed “Bloke,” a journalist who composed a jazz opera about the boxer King Kong, and the novelist of Mating Birds. In a story set in this city, a golfer watches an old man collapse while carrying what he thought was his son’s coffin. An author from a suburb of this city outlined “How [her country’s] Censorship Works” in an essay whose title asks, “What Happened to” one of her novels. That author, who was part of this city’s Sophiatown Renaissance, wrote the short story “Six Feet of the Country.” For 10 points, name this city home to the author of Burger’s Daughter, Nadine Gordimer.
Johannesburg [or Joburg; accept Sophiatown until read, but prompt afterwards; prompt on Springs] (The short story in the first line is “The Suit” by Can Themba. The Drum writers are Bloke Modisane, Lewis Nkosi, and Todd Matshikiza.)
[ [ 0, 162 ], [ 163, 228 ], [ 229, 441 ], [ 442, 561 ], [ 562, 714 ], [ 715, 828 ], [ 829, 916 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - World Literature", "category_main": "literature-world-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 40, 15 ], [ 52, -5 ], [ 54, -5 ], [ 59, 15 ], [ 85, -5 ], [ 118, 10 ], [ 121, -5 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 137, 10 ], [ 160, 10 ], [ 161, 10 ], [ 163, 0 ], [ 163, 0 ], [ 163, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet L. Editors 6", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "world-literature" ] }
acf-co24-12-19_1
One of these substances, like the telegraph, gastric physiology, and Lake Superior’s copper deposits, was the subject of a priority claim by C. T. Jackson.
[ "laughing gases until read", "Ether Dome until ether is read", "Anaesthetic", "anesthetics", "chloroform", "laughing gas", "anesthesia", "ethers, chloroform, nitrous oxide,", "nitrous oxide", "local, regional,", "The Anaesthetic Revelation: and the Gist of Philosophy", "anesthetic", "Ether Monument", "Ether", "general anesthesia", "word forms of anesthesia", "ether", "ether chloroform nitrous oxide" ]
acf-co24-12-19
1
One of these substances, like the telegraph, gastric physiology, and Lake Superior’s copper deposits, was the subject of a priority claim by C. T. Jackson. A monument celebrating these substances depicts a generic turban-clad “Good Samaritan.” These substances revealed the “gist of philosophy” to Benjamin Blood. Oliver Wendell Holmes coined the word for these substances after a demonstration at which John Collins Warren declared “Gentlemen! This is no humbug.” 19th-century hopes for a “unitary hypothesis” of these substances led to the Meyer–Overton correlation of their efficacy with solubility in olive oil. A “dome” in Boston celebrates William Morton’s work with these substances, which grew in popularity after John Snow administered one to Queen Victoria during childbirth. For 10 points, 19th-century doctors used ether and chloroform as what substances?
anesthetics [or word forms of anesthesia; accept ethers, chloroform, nitrous oxide, or laughing gases until read; accept local, regional, or general anesthesia; accept Ether Monument or Ether Dome until “ether” is read; accept The Anaesthetic Revelation: and the Gist of Philosophy; prompt on drugs or gases]
[ [ 0, 155 ], [ 156, 243 ], [ 244, 313 ], [ 314, 616 ], [ 617, 786 ], [ 787, 868 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - American History", "category_main": "history-american-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 48, 15 ], [ 64, 15 ], [ 64, 15 ], [ 84, 10 ], [ 87, 10 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 105, 10 ], [ 112, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 114, -5 ], [ 128, 0 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet L. Editors 6", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "american-history" ] }
acf-co24-12-19_2
A monument celebrating these substances depicts a generic turban-clad “Good Samaritan.”
[ "laughing gases until read", "Ether Dome until ether is read", "Anaesthetic", "anesthetics", "chloroform", "laughing gas", "anesthesia", "ethers, chloroform, nitrous oxide,", "nitrous oxide", "local, regional,", "The Anaesthetic Revelation: and the Gist of Philosophy", "anesthetic", "Ether Monument", "Ether", "general anesthesia", "word forms of anesthesia", "ether", "ether chloroform nitrous oxide" ]
acf-co24-12-19
2
One of these substances, like the telegraph, gastric physiology, and Lake Superior’s copper deposits, was the subject of a priority claim by C. T. Jackson. A monument celebrating these substances depicts a generic turban-clad “Good Samaritan.” These substances revealed the “gist of philosophy” to Benjamin Blood. Oliver Wendell Holmes coined the word for these substances after a demonstration at which John Collins Warren declared “Gentlemen! This is no humbug.” 19th-century hopes for a “unitary hypothesis” of these substances led to the Meyer–Overton correlation of their efficacy with solubility in olive oil. A “dome” in Boston celebrates William Morton’s work with these substances, which grew in popularity after John Snow administered one to Queen Victoria during childbirth. For 10 points, 19th-century doctors used ether and chloroform as what substances?
anesthetics [or word forms of anesthesia; accept ethers, chloroform, nitrous oxide, or laughing gases until read; accept local, regional, or general anesthesia; accept Ether Monument or Ether Dome until “ether” is read; accept The Anaesthetic Revelation: and the Gist of Philosophy; prompt on drugs or gases]
[ [ 0, 155 ], [ 156, 243 ], [ 244, 313 ], [ 314, 616 ], [ 617, 786 ], [ 787, 868 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - American History", "category_main": "history-american-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 48, 15 ], [ 64, 15 ], [ 64, 15 ], [ 84, 10 ], [ 87, 10 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 105, 10 ], [ 112, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 114, -5 ], [ 128, 0 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet L. Editors 6", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "american-history" ] }
acf-co24-12-19_3
These substances revealed the “gist of philosophy” to Benjamin Blood.
[ "laughing gases until read", "Ether Dome until ether is read", "Anaesthetic", "anesthetics", "chloroform", "laughing gas", "anesthesia", "ethers, chloroform, nitrous oxide,", "nitrous oxide", "local, regional,", "The Anaesthetic Revelation: and the Gist of Philosophy", "anesthetic", "Ether Monument", "Ether", "general anesthesia", "word forms of anesthesia", "ether", "ether chloroform nitrous oxide" ]
acf-co24-12-19
3
One of these substances, like the telegraph, gastric physiology, and Lake Superior’s copper deposits, was the subject of a priority claim by C. T. Jackson. A monument celebrating these substances depicts a generic turban-clad “Good Samaritan.” These substances revealed the “gist of philosophy” to Benjamin Blood. Oliver Wendell Holmes coined the word for these substances after a demonstration at which John Collins Warren declared “Gentlemen! This is no humbug.” 19th-century hopes for a “unitary hypothesis” of these substances led to the Meyer–Overton correlation of their efficacy with solubility in olive oil. A “dome” in Boston celebrates William Morton’s work with these substances, which grew in popularity after John Snow administered one to Queen Victoria during childbirth. For 10 points, 19th-century doctors used ether and chloroform as what substances?
anesthetics [or word forms of anesthesia; accept ethers, chloroform, nitrous oxide, or laughing gases until read; accept local, regional, or general anesthesia; accept Ether Monument or Ether Dome until “ether” is read; accept The Anaesthetic Revelation: and the Gist of Philosophy; prompt on drugs or gases]
[ [ 0, 155 ], [ 156, 243 ], [ 244, 313 ], [ 314, 616 ], [ 617, 786 ], [ 787, 868 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - American History", "category_main": "history-american-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 48, 15 ], [ 64, 15 ], [ 64, 15 ], [ 84, 10 ], [ 87, 10 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 105, 10 ], [ 112, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 114, -5 ], [ 128, 0 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet L. Editors 6", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "american-history" ] }
acf-co24-12-19_4
Oliver Wendell Holmes coined the word for these substances after a demonstration at which John Collins Warren declared “Gentlemen! This is no humbug.” 19th-century hopes for a “unitary hypothesis” of these substances led to the Meyer–Overton correlation of their efficacy with solubility in olive oil.
[ "laughing gases until read", "Ether Dome until ether is read", "Anaesthetic", "anesthetics", "chloroform", "laughing gas", "anesthesia", "ethers, chloroform, nitrous oxide,", "nitrous oxide", "local, regional,", "The Anaesthetic Revelation: and the Gist of Philosophy", "anesthetic", "Ether Monument", "Ether", "general anesthesia", "word forms of anesthesia", "ether", "ether chloroform nitrous oxide" ]
acf-co24-12-19
4
One of these substances, like the telegraph, gastric physiology, and Lake Superior’s copper deposits, was the subject of a priority claim by C. T. Jackson. A monument celebrating these substances depicts a generic turban-clad “Good Samaritan.” These substances revealed the “gist of philosophy” to Benjamin Blood. Oliver Wendell Holmes coined the word for these substances after a demonstration at which John Collins Warren declared “Gentlemen! This is no humbug.” 19th-century hopes for a “unitary hypothesis” of these substances led to the Meyer–Overton correlation of their efficacy with solubility in olive oil. A “dome” in Boston celebrates William Morton’s work with these substances, which grew in popularity after John Snow administered one to Queen Victoria during childbirth. For 10 points, 19th-century doctors used ether and chloroform as what substances?
anesthetics [or word forms of anesthesia; accept ethers, chloroform, nitrous oxide, or laughing gases until read; accept local, regional, or general anesthesia; accept Ether Monument or Ether Dome until “ether” is read; accept The Anaesthetic Revelation: and the Gist of Philosophy; prompt on drugs or gases]
[ [ 0, 155 ], [ 156, 243 ], [ 244, 313 ], [ 314, 616 ], [ 617, 786 ], [ 787, 868 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - American History", "category_main": "history-american-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 48, 15 ], [ 64, 15 ], [ 64, 15 ], [ 84, 10 ], [ 87, 10 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 105, 10 ], [ 112, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 114, -5 ], [ 128, 0 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet L. Editors 6", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "american-history" ] }
acf-co24-12-19_5
A “dome” in Boston celebrates William Morton’s work with these substances, which grew in popularity after John Snow administered one to Queen Victoria during childbirth.
[ "laughing gases until read", "Ether Dome until ether is read", "Anaesthetic", "anesthetics", "chloroform", "laughing gas", "anesthesia", "ethers, chloroform, nitrous oxide,", "nitrous oxide", "local, regional,", "The Anaesthetic Revelation: and the Gist of Philosophy", "anesthetic", "Ether Monument", "Ether", "general anesthesia", "word forms of anesthesia", "ether", "ether chloroform nitrous oxide" ]
acf-co24-12-19
5
One of these substances, like the telegraph, gastric physiology, and Lake Superior’s copper deposits, was the subject of a priority claim by C. T. Jackson. A monument celebrating these substances depicts a generic turban-clad “Good Samaritan.” These substances revealed the “gist of philosophy” to Benjamin Blood. Oliver Wendell Holmes coined the word for these substances after a demonstration at which John Collins Warren declared “Gentlemen! This is no humbug.” 19th-century hopes for a “unitary hypothesis” of these substances led to the Meyer–Overton correlation of their efficacy with solubility in olive oil. A “dome” in Boston celebrates William Morton’s work with these substances, which grew in popularity after John Snow administered one to Queen Victoria during childbirth. For 10 points, 19th-century doctors used ether and chloroform as what substances?
anesthetics [or word forms of anesthesia; accept ethers, chloroform, nitrous oxide, or laughing gases until read; accept local, regional, or general anesthesia; accept Ether Monument or Ether Dome until “ether” is read; accept The Anaesthetic Revelation: and the Gist of Philosophy; prompt on drugs or gases]
[ [ 0, 155 ], [ 156, 243 ], [ 244, 313 ], [ 314, 616 ], [ 617, 786 ], [ 787, 868 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - American History", "category_main": "history-american-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 48, 15 ], [ 64, 15 ], [ 64, 15 ], [ 84, 10 ], [ 87, 10 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 105, 10 ], [ 112, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 114, -5 ], [ 128, 0 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet L. Editors 6", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "american-history" ] }
acf-co24-12-19_6
For 10 points, 19th-century doctors used ether and chloroform as what substances?
[ "laughing gases until read", "Ether Dome until ether is read", "Anaesthetic", "anesthetics", "chloroform", "laughing gas", "anesthesia", "ethers, chloroform, nitrous oxide,", "nitrous oxide", "local, regional,", "The Anaesthetic Revelation: and the Gist of Philosophy", "anesthetic", "Ether Monument", "Ether", "general anesthesia", "word forms of anesthesia", "ether", "ether chloroform nitrous oxide" ]
acf-co24-12-19
6
One of these substances, like the telegraph, gastric physiology, and Lake Superior’s copper deposits, was the subject of a priority claim by C. T. Jackson. A monument celebrating these substances depicts a generic turban-clad “Good Samaritan.” These substances revealed the “gist of philosophy” to Benjamin Blood. Oliver Wendell Holmes coined the word for these substances after a demonstration at which John Collins Warren declared “Gentlemen! This is no humbug.” 19th-century hopes for a “unitary hypothesis” of these substances led to the Meyer–Overton correlation of their efficacy with solubility in olive oil. A “dome” in Boston celebrates William Morton’s work with these substances, which grew in popularity after John Snow administered one to Queen Victoria during childbirth. For 10 points, 19th-century doctors used ether and chloroform as what substances?
anesthetics [or word forms of anesthesia; accept ethers, chloroform, nitrous oxide, or laughing gases until read; accept local, regional, or general anesthesia; accept Ether Monument or Ether Dome until “ether” is read; accept The Anaesthetic Revelation: and the Gist of Philosophy; prompt on drugs or gases]
[ [ 0, 155 ], [ 156, 243 ], [ 244, 313 ], [ 314, 616 ], [ 617, 786 ], [ 787, 868 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - American History", "category_main": "history-american-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 48, 15 ], [ 64, 15 ], [ 64, 15 ], [ 84, 10 ], [ 87, 10 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 105, 10 ], [ 112, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 114, -5 ], [ 128, 0 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet L. Editors 6", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "american-history" ] }
acf-co24-12-20_1
A reclining figure in a lost painting by this artist was repurposed as the subject of a lamentation this artist painted for the Bichi Chapel.
[ "Luca Signorelli", "Signorelli" ]
acf-co24-12-20
1
A reclining figure in a lost painting by this artist was repurposed as the subject of a lamentation this artist painted for the Bichi Chapel. A corridor dedicated to this artist connects the house and library at Harvard’s Villa I Tatti. The only artwork in the Sistine Chapel attributed to this artist was executed with Bartolomeo della Gatta and shows the Testament and Death of Moses. The presence of a laurel tree confirms that this artist’s lost masterpiece, The Education of Pan, was created for Lorenzo de’ Medici. Sigmund Freud failed to recall the name of this artist in the first example of parapraxis. This artist was hired to complete a fresco cycle begun by Fra Angelico for the San Brizio Chapel. This student of Piero della Francesca showed the devil whispering into the ear of the Antichrist. For 10 points, name this artist from Cortona who created huge frescoes of the Last Judgment for the Orvieto Cathedral.
Luca Signorelli
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{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Painting and Sculpture", "category_main": "fine-arts-painting-and-sculpture", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 94, 15 ], [ 103, -5 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 127, -5 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 145, -5 ], [ 145, -5 ], [ 151, -5 ], [ 153, 10 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ] ], "packet": "Packet L. Editors 6", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "painting-and-sculpture" ] }
acf-co24-12-20_2
A corridor dedicated to this artist connects the house and library at Harvard’s Villa I Tatti.
[ "Luca Signorelli", "Signorelli" ]
acf-co24-12-20
2
A reclining figure in a lost painting by this artist was repurposed as the subject of a lamentation this artist painted for the Bichi Chapel. A corridor dedicated to this artist connects the house and library at Harvard’s Villa I Tatti. The only artwork in the Sistine Chapel attributed to this artist was executed with Bartolomeo della Gatta and shows the Testament and Death of Moses. The presence of a laurel tree confirms that this artist’s lost masterpiece, The Education of Pan, was created for Lorenzo de’ Medici. Sigmund Freud failed to recall the name of this artist in the first example of parapraxis. This artist was hired to complete a fresco cycle begun by Fra Angelico for the San Brizio Chapel. This student of Piero della Francesca showed the devil whispering into the ear of the Antichrist. For 10 points, name this artist from Cortona who created huge frescoes of the Last Judgment for the Orvieto Cathedral.
Luca Signorelli
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{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Painting and Sculpture", "category_main": "fine-arts-painting-and-sculpture", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 94, 15 ], [ 103, -5 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 127, -5 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 145, -5 ], [ 145, -5 ], [ 151, -5 ], [ 153, 10 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ] ], "packet": "Packet L. Editors 6", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "painting-and-sculpture" ] }
acf-co24-12-20_3
The only artwork in the Sistine Chapel attributed to this artist was executed with Bartolomeo della Gatta and shows the Testament and Death of Moses.
[ "Luca Signorelli", "Signorelli" ]
acf-co24-12-20
3
A reclining figure in a lost painting by this artist was repurposed as the subject of a lamentation this artist painted for the Bichi Chapel. A corridor dedicated to this artist connects the house and library at Harvard’s Villa I Tatti. The only artwork in the Sistine Chapel attributed to this artist was executed with Bartolomeo della Gatta and shows the Testament and Death of Moses. The presence of a laurel tree confirms that this artist’s lost masterpiece, The Education of Pan, was created for Lorenzo de’ Medici. Sigmund Freud failed to recall the name of this artist in the first example of parapraxis. This artist was hired to complete a fresco cycle begun by Fra Angelico for the San Brizio Chapel. This student of Piero della Francesca showed the devil whispering into the ear of the Antichrist. For 10 points, name this artist from Cortona who created huge frescoes of the Last Judgment for the Orvieto Cathedral.
Luca Signorelli
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{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Painting and Sculpture", "category_main": "fine-arts-painting-and-sculpture", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 94, 15 ], [ 103, -5 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 127, -5 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 145, -5 ], [ 145, -5 ], [ 151, -5 ], [ 153, 10 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ] ], "packet": "Packet L. Editors 6", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "painting-and-sculpture" ] }
acf-co24-12-20_4
The presence of a laurel tree confirms that this artist’s lost masterpiece, The Education of Pan, was created for Lorenzo de’ Medici.
[ "Luca Signorelli", "Signorelli" ]
acf-co24-12-20
4
A reclining figure in a lost painting by this artist was repurposed as the subject of a lamentation this artist painted for the Bichi Chapel. A corridor dedicated to this artist connects the house and library at Harvard’s Villa I Tatti. The only artwork in the Sistine Chapel attributed to this artist was executed with Bartolomeo della Gatta and shows the Testament and Death of Moses. The presence of a laurel tree confirms that this artist’s lost masterpiece, The Education of Pan, was created for Lorenzo de’ Medici. Sigmund Freud failed to recall the name of this artist in the first example of parapraxis. This artist was hired to complete a fresco cycle begun by Fra Angelico for the San Brizio Chapel. This student of Piero della Francesca showed the devil whispering into the ear of the Antichrist. For 10 points, name this artist from Cortona who created huge frescoes of the Last Judgment for the Orvieto Cathedral.
Luca Signorelli
[ [ 0, 141 ], [ 142, 236 ], [ 237, 386 ], [ 387, 520 ], [ 521, 612 ], [ 613, 710 ], [ 711, 808 ], [ 809, 927 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Painting and Sculpture", "category_main": "fine-arts-painting-and-sculpture", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 94, 15 ], [ 103, -5 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 127, -5 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 145, -5 ], [ 145, -5 ], [ 151, -5 ], [ 153, 10 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ] ], "packet": "Packet L. Editors 6", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "painting-and-sculpture" ] }
acf-co24-12-20_5
Sigmund Freud failed to recall the name of this artist in the first example of parapraxis.
[ "Luca Signorelli", "Signorelli" ]
acf-co24-12-20
5
A reclining figure in a lost painting by this artist was repurposed as the subject of a lamentation this artist painted for the Bichi Chapel. A corridor dedicated to this artist connects the house and library at Harvard’s Villa I Tatti. The only artwork in the Sistine Chapel attributed to this artist was executed with Bartolomeo della Gatta and shows the Testament and Death of Moses. The presence of a laurel tree confirms that this artist’s lost masterpiece, The Education of Pan, was created for Lorenzo de’ Medici. Sigmund Freud failed to recall the name of this artist in the first example of parapraxis. This artist was hired to complete a fresco cycle begun by Fra Angelico for the San Brizio Chapel. This student of Piero della Francesca showed the devil whispering into the ear of the Antichrist. For 10 points, name this artist from Cortona who created huge frescoes of the Last Judgment for the Orvieto Cathedral.
Luca Signorelli
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{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Painting and Sculpture", "category_main": "fine-arts-painting-and-sculpture", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 94, 15 ], [ 103, -5 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 127, -5 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 145, -5 ], [ 145, -5 ], [ 151, -5 ], [ 153, 10 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ] ], "packet": "Packet L. Editors 6", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "painting-and-sculpture" ] }
acf-co24-12-20_6
This artist was hired to complete a fresco cycle begun by Fra Angelico for the San Brizio Chapel.
[ "Luca Signorelli", "Signorelli" ]
acf-co24-12-20
6
A reclining figure in a lost painting by this artist was repurposed as the subject of a lamentation this artist painted for the Bichi Chapel. A corridor dedicated to this artist connects the house and library at Harvard’s Villa I Tatti. The only artwork in the Sistine Chapel attributed to this artist was executed with Bartolomeo della Gatta and shows the Testament and Death of Moses. The presence of a laurel tree confirms that this artist’s lost masterpiece, The Education of Pan, was created for Lorenzo de’ Medici. Sigmund Freud failed to recall the name of this artist in the first example of parapraxis. This artist was hired to complete a fresco cycle begun by Fra Angelico for the San Brizio Chapel. This student of Piero della Francesca showed the devil whispering into the ear of the Antichrist. For 10 points, name this artist from Cortona who created huge frescoes of the Last Judgment for the Orvieto Cathedral.
Luca Signorelli
[ [ 0, 141 ], [ 142, 236 ], [ 237, 386 ], [ 387, 520 ], [ 521, 612 ], [ 613, 710 ], [ 711, 808 ], [ 809, 927 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Painting and Sculpture", "category_main": "fine-arts-painting-and-sculpture", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 94, 15 ], [ 103, -5 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 127, -5 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 145, -5 ], [ 145, -5 ], [ 151, -5 ], [ 153, 10 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ] ], "packet": "Packet L. Editors 6", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "painting-and-sculpture" ] }
acf-co24-12-20_7
This student of Piero della Francesca showed the devil whispering into the ear of the Antichrist.
[ "Luca Signorelli", "Signorelli" ]
acf-co24-12-20
7
A reclining figure in a lost painting by this artist was repurposed as the subject of a lamentation this artist painted for the Bichi Chapel. A corridor dedicated to this artist connects the house and library at Harvard’s Villa I Tatti. The only artwork in the Sistine Chapel attributed to this artist was executed with Bartolomeo della Gatta and shows the Testament and Death of Moses. The presence of a laurel tree confirms that this artist’s lost masterpiece, The Education of Pan, was created for Lorenzo de’ Medici. Sigmund Freud failed to recall the name of this artist in the first example of parapraxis. This artist was hired to complete a fresco cycle begun by Fra Angelico for the San Brizio Chapel. This student of Piero della Francesca showed the devil whispering into the ear of the Antichrist. For 10 points, name this artist from Cortona who created huge frescoes of the Last Judgment for the Orvieto Cathedral.
Luca Signorelli
[ [ 0, 141 ], [ 142, 236 ], [ 237, 386 ], [ 387, 520 ], [ 521, 612 ], [ 613, 710 ], [ 711, 808 ], [ 809, 927 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Painting and Sculpture", "category_main": "fine-arts-painting-and-sculpture", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 94, 15 ], [ 103, -5 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 127, -5 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 145, -5 ], [ 145, -5 ], [ 151, -5 ], [ 153, 10 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ] ], "packet": "Packet L. Editors 6", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "painting-and-sculpture" ] }
acf-co24-12-20_8
For 10 points, name this artist from Cortona who created huge frescoes of the Last Judgment for the Orvieto Cathedral.
[ "Luca Signorelli", "Signorelli" ]
acf-co24-12-20
8
A reclining figure in a lost painting by this artist was repurposed as the subject of a lamentation this artist painted for the Bichi Chapel. A corridor dedicated to this artist connects the house and library at Harvard’s Villa I Tatti. The only artwork in the Sistine Chapel attributed to this artist was executed with Bartolomeo della Gatta and shows the Testament and Death of Moses. The presence of a laurel tree confirms that this artist’s lost masterpiece, The Education of Pan, was created for Lorenzo de’ Medici. Sigmund Freud failed to recall the name of this artist in the first example of parapraxis. This artist was hired to complete a fresco cycle begun by Fra Angelico for the San Brizio Chapel. This student of Piero della Francesca showed the devil whispering into the ear of the Antichrist. For 10 points, name this artist from Cortona who created huge frescoes of the Last Judgment for the Orvieto Cathedral.
Luca Signorelli
[ [ 0, 141 ], [ 142, 236 ], [ 237, 386 ], [ 387, 520 ], [ 521, 612 ], [ 613, 710 ], [ 711, 808 ], [ 809, 927 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Painting and Sculpture", "category_main": "fine-arts-painting-and-sculpture", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 94, 15 ], [ 103, -5 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 127, -5 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 145, -5 ], [ 145, -5 ], [ 151, -5 ], [ 153, 10 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ], [ 158, 0 ] ], "packet": "Packet L. Editors 6", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "painting-and-sculpture" ] }
acf-co24-13-1_1
Music theorists from this modern-day country notated dynamics in a 16-column table and drew tunings as concentric arcs in the influential treatise Book of Modes.
[ "Greater Persia", "Iran", "Greater Iran", "Persia" ]
acf-co24-13-1
1
Music theorists from this modern-day country notated dynamics in a 16-column table and drew tunings as concentric arcs in the influential treatise Book of Modes. Loris Tjeknavorian wrote an opera with Orff’s help based on an epic from this country and scored a film starring the singer Googoosh. A musicologist from this modern-day country designed the sori and koron, shaped like an angular P and pilcrow, when introducing Western notation and quarter-tone accidentals in the early 20th century. A 5-part suite’s free improvisation, tasnif, and rhythmic reng are based on modes like Shur and Dashti, two of the 12 avaz and dastgah associated with gusheh melodies collectively called this country’s radif. This modern-day country originated the double-bowled tar lute, santur dulcimer, and kamancheh fiddle. For 10 points, the reformer Ali-Naqi Vaziri and traditionalist Nur-Ali Borumand are from what country that outlawed Western music after an Islamic Revolution?
Iran [or Persia; accept Greater Iran or Greater Persia] (The first clue is about the 13th-century scholars Qutb ad-Din ash-Shirazi and Safi ad-Din al-Urmawi/Ormavi. Sources used: The Study of Ethnomusicology by Bruno Nettl and The Dastgah Concept in Persian Music by Hormoz Farhat.)
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{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Classical Music and Opera", "category_main": "fine-arts-classical-music-and-opera", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 25, -5 ], [ 47, -5 ], [ 53, 15 ], [ 64, 15 ], [ 93, 10 ], [ 97, 10 ], [ 102, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 144, -5 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "classical-music-and-opera" ] }
acf-co24-13-1_2
Loris Tjeknavorian wrote an opera with Orff’s help based on an epic from this country and scored a film starring the singer Googoosh.
[ "Greater Persia", "Iran", "Greater Iran", "Persia" ]
acf-co24-13-1
2
Music theorists from this modern-day country notated dynamics in a 16-column table and drew tunings as concentric arcs in the influential treatise Book of Modes. Loris Tjeknavorian wrote an opera with Orff’s help based on an epic from this country and scored a film starring the singer Googoosh. A musicologist from this modern-day country designed the sori and koron, shaped like an angular P and pilcrow, when introducing Western notation and quarter-tone accidentals in the early 20th century. A 5-part suite’s free improvisation, tasnif, and rhythmic reng are based on modes like Shur and Dashti, two of the 12 avaz and dastgah associated with gusheh melodies collectively called this country’s radif. This modern-day country originated the double-bowled tar lute, santur dulcimer, and kamancheh fiddle. For 10 points, the reformer Ali-Naqi Vaziri and traditionalist Nur-Ali Borumand are from what country that outlawed Western music after an Islamic Revolution?
Iran [or Persia; accept Greater Iran or Greater Persia] (The first clue is about the 13th-century scholars Qutb ad-Din ash-Shirazi and Safi ad-Din al-Urmawi/Ormavi. Sources used: The Study of Ethnomusicology by Bruno Nettl and The Dastgah Concept in Persian Music by Hormoz Farhat.)
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{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Classical Music and Opera", "category_main": "fine-arts-classical-music-and-opera", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 25, -5 ], [ 47, -5 ], [ 53, 15 ], [ 64, 15 ], [ 93, 10 ], [ 97, 10 ], [ 102, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 144, -5 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "classical-music-and-opera" ] }
acf-co24-13-1_3
A musicologist from this modern-day country designed the sori and koron, shaped like an angular P and pilcrow, when introducing Western notation and quarter-tone accidentals in the early 20th century.
[ "Greater Persia", "Iran", "Greater Iran", "Persia" ]
acf-co24-13-1
3
Music theorists from this modern-day country notated dynamics in a 16-column table and drew tunings as concentric arcs in the influential treatise Book of Modes. Loris Tjeknavorian wrote an opera with Orff’s help based on an epic from this country and scored a film starring the singer Googoosh. A musicologist from this modern-day country designed the sori and koron, shaped like an angular P and pilcrow, when introducing Western notation and quarter-tone accidentals in the early 20th century. A 5-part suite’s free improvisation, tasnif, and rhythmic reng are based on modes like Shur and Dashti, two of the 12 avaz and dastgah associated with gusheh melodies collectively called this country’s radif. This modern-day country originated the double-bowled tar lute, santur dulcimer, and kamancheh fiddle. For 10 points, the reformer Ali-Naqi Vaziri and traditionalist Nur-Ali Borumand are from what country that outlawed Western music after an Islamic Revolution?
Iran [or Persia; accept Greater Iran or Greater Persia] (The first clue is about the 13th-century scholars Qutb ad-Din ash-Shirazi and Safi ad-Din al-Urmawi/Ormavi. Sources used: The Study of Ethnomusicology by Bruno Nettl and The Dastgah Concept in Persian Music by Hormoz Farhat.)
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{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Classical Music and Opera", "category_main": "fine-arts-classical-music-and-opera", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 25, -5 ], [ 47, -5 ], [ 53, 15 ], [ 64, 15 ], [ 93, 10 ], [ 97, 10 ], [ 102, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 144, -5 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "classical-music-and-opera" ] }
acf-co24-13-1_4
A 5-part suite’s free improvisation, tasnif, and rhythmic reng are based on modes like Shur and Dashti, two of the 12 avaz and dastgah associated with gusheh melodies collectively called this country’s radif.
[ "Greater Persia", "Iran", "Greater Iran", "Persia" ]
acf-co24-13-1
4
Music theorists from this modern-day country notated dynamics in a 16-column table and drew tunings as concentric arcs in the influential treatise Book of Modes. Loris Tjeknavorian wrote an opera with Orff’s help based on an epic from this country and scored a film starring the singer Googoosh. A musicologist from this modern-day country designed the sori and koron, shaped like an angular P and pilcrow, when introducing Western notation and quarter-tone accidentals in the early 20th century. A 5-part suite’s free improvisation, tasnif, and rhythmic reng are based on modes like Shur and Dashti, two of the 12 avaz and dastgah associated with gusheh melodies collectively called this country’s radif. This modern-day country originated the double-bowled tar lute, santur dulcimer, and kamancheh fiddle. For 10 points, the reformer Ali-Naqi Vaziri and traditionalist Nur-Ali Borumand are from what country that outlawed Western music after an Islamic Revolution?
Iran [or Persia; accept Greater Iran or Greater Persia] (The first clue is about the 13th-century scholars Qutb ad-Din ash-Shirazi and Safi ad-Din al-Urmawi/Ormavi. Sources used: The Study of Ethnomusicology by Bruno Nettl and The Dastgah Concept in Persian Music by Hormoz Farhat.)
[ [ 0, 161 ], [ 162, 295 ], [ 296, 497 ], [ 498, 706 ], [ 707, 808 ], [ 809, 967 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Classical Music and Opera", "category_main": "fine-arts-classical-music-and-opera", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 25, -5 ], [ 47, -5 ], [ 53, 15 ], [ 64, 15 ], [ 93, 10 ], [ 97, 10 ], [ 102, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 144, -5 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "classical-music-and-opera" ] }
acf-co24-13-1_5
This modern-day country originated the double-bowled tar lute, santur dulcimer, and kamancheh fiddle.
[ "Greater Persia", "Iran", "Greater Iran", "Persia" ]
acf-co24-13-1
5
Music theorists from this modern-day country notated dynamics in a 16-column table and drew tunings as concentric arcs in the influential treatise Book of Modes. Loris Tjeknavorian wrote an opera with Orff’s help based on an epic from this country and scored a film starring the singer Googoosh. A musicologist from this modern-day country designed the sori and koron, shaped like an angular P and pilcrow, when introducing Western notation and quarter-tone accidentals in the early 20th century. A 5-part suite’s free improvisation, tasnif, and rhythmic reng are based on modes like Shur and Dashti, two of the 12 avaz and dastgah associated with gusheh melodies collectively called this country’s radif. This modern-day country originated the double-bowled tar lute, santur dulcimer, and kamancheh fiddle. For 10 points, the reformer Ali-Naqi Vaziri and traditionalist Nur-Ali Borumand are from what country that outlawed Western music after an Islamic Revolution?
Iran [or Persia; accept Greater Iran or Greater Persia] (The first clue is about the 13th-century scholars Qutb ad-Din ash-Shirazi and Safi ad-Din al-Urmawi/Ormavi. Sources used: The Study of Ethnomusicology by Bruno Nettl and The Dastgah Concept in Persian Music by Hormoz Farhat.)
[ [ 0, 161 ], [ 162, 295 ], [ 296, 497 ], [ 498, 706 ], [ 707, 808 ], [ 809, 967 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Classical Music and Opera", "category_main": "fine-arts-classical-music-and-opera", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 25, -5 ], [ 47, -5 ], [ 53, 15 ], [ 64, 15 ], [ 93, 10 ], [ 97, 10 ], [ 102, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 144, -5 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "classical-music-and-opera" ] }
acf-co24-13-1_6
For 10 points, the reformer Ali-Naqi Vaziri and traditionalist Nur-Ali Borumand are from what country that outlawed Western music after an Islamic Revolution?
[ "Greater Persia", "Iran", "Greater Iran", "Persia" ]
acf-co24-13-1
6
Music theorists from this modern-day country notated dynamics in a 16-column table and drew tunings as concentric arcs in the influential treatise Book of Modes. Loris Tjeknavorian wrote an opera with Orff’s help based on an epic from this country and scored a film starring the singer Googoosh. A musicologist from this modern-day country designed the sori and koron, shaped like an angular P and pilcrow, when introducing Western notation and quarter-tone accidentals in the early 20th century. A 5-part suite’s free improvisation, tasnif, and rhythmic reng are based on modes like Shur and Dashti, two of the 12 avaz and dastgah associated with gusheh melodies collectively called this country’s radif. This modern-day country originated the double-bowled tar lute, santur dulcimer, and kamancheh fiddle. For 10 points, the reformer Ali-Naqi Vaziri and traditionalist Nur-Ali Borumand are from what country that outlawed Western music after an Islamic Revolution?
Iran [or Persia; accept Greater Iran or Greater Persia] (The first clue is about the 13th-century scholars Qutb ad-Din ash-Shirazi and Safi ad-Din al-Urmawi/Ormavi. Sources used: The Study of Ethnomusicology by Bruno Nettl and The Dastgah Concept in Persian Music by Hormoz Farhat.)
[ [ 0, 161 ], [ 162, 295 ], [ 296, 497 ], [ 498, 706 ], [ 707, 808 ], [ 809, 967 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Classical Music and Opera", "category_main": "fine-arts-classical-music-and-opera", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 25, -5 ], [ 47, -5 ], [ 53, 15 ], [ 64, 15 ], [ 93, 10 ], [ 97, 10 ], [ 102, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 144, -5 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "classical-music-and-opera" ] }
acf-co24-13-2_1
An essay contrasts the “immunity” felt by Trollope and Austen with this event’s intrusion into the writer’s daily lives, and wonders if this event will end the classism of the title “Leaning Tower.”
[ "Phoney War", "World War II", "Blitz", "the Blitz", "WWII", "the Phoney War" ]
acf-co24-13-2
1
An essay contrasts the “immunity” felt by Trollope and Austen with this event’s intrusion into the writer’s daily lives, and wonders if this event will end the classism of the title “Leaning Tower.” Concerns about this event inspired a three-years-late reply to a letter “perhaps unique in the history of human correspondence” because it’s from an educated man asking a woman’s opinion. An essay about this event asks how we can free young Englishmen “from the machine” and ends by quoting Thomas Browne’s “half-forgotten” remark that “the huntsmen are up in America.” The leadup to this event inspired Three Guineas. This event led to the relocation of Hogarth Press when the Woolfs’ home in Mecklenburgh Square was destroyed. For 10 points, Virginia Woolf’s suicide is often attributed to despair brought by what event that inspired “Thoughts on Peace in an Air Raid?”
World War II [or WWII; accept the Blitz or the Phoney War; prompt on the outbreak of war; reject “the Great War” or “the European War”]
[ [ 0, 198 ], [ 199, 386 ], [ 387, 569 ], [ 570, 618 ], [ 619, 728 ], [ 729, 871 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - British Literature", "category_main": "literature-british-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 51, 15 ], [ 93, 10 ], [ 101, -5 ], [ 111, -5 ], [ 112, -5 ], [ 117, -5 ], [ 118, 10 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 136, -5 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "british-literature" ] }
acf-co24-13-2_2
Concerns about this event inspired a three-years-late reply to a letter “perhaps unique in the history of human correspondence” because it’s from an educated man asking a woman’s opinion.
[ "Phoney War", "World War II", "Blitz", "the Blitz", "WWII", "the Phoney War" ]
acf-co24-13-2
2
An essay contrasts the “immunity” felt by Trollope and Austen with this event’s intrusion into the writer’s daily lives, and wonders if this event will end the classism of the title “Leaning Tower.” Concerns about this event inspired a three-years-late reply to a letter “perhaps unique in the history of human correspondence” because it’s from an educated man asking a woman’s opinion. An essay about this event asks how we can free young Englishmen “from the machine” and ends by quoting Thomas Browne’s “half-forgotten” remark that “the huntsmen are up in America.” The leadup to this event inspired Three Guineas. This event led to the relocation of Hogarth Press when the Woolfs’ home in Mecklenburgh Square was destroyed. For 10 points, Virginia Woolf’s suicide is often attributed to despair brought by what event that inspired “Thoughts on Peace in an Air Raid?”
World War II [or WWII; accept the Blitz or the Phoney War; prompt on the outbreak of war; reject “the Great War” or “the European War”]
[ [ 0, 198 ], [ 199, 386 ], [ 387, 569 ], [ 570, 618 ], [ 619, 728 ], [ 729, 871 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - British Literature", "category_main": "literature-british-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 51, 15 ], [ 93, 10 ], [ 101, -5 ], [ 111, -5 ], [ 112, -5 ], [ 117, -5 ], [ 118, 10 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 136, -5 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "british-literature" ] }
acf-co24-13-2_3
An essay about this event asks how we can free young Englishmen “from the machine” and ends by quoting Thomas Browne’s “half-forgotten” remark that “the huntsmen are up in America.”
[ "Phoney War", "World War II", "Blitz", "the Blitz", "WWII", "the Phoney War" ]
acf-co24-13-2
3
An essay contrasts the “immunity” felt by Trollope and Austen with this event’s intrusion into the writer’s daily lives, and wonders if this event will end the classism of the title “Leaning Tower.” Concerns about this event inspired a three-years-late reply to a letter “perhaps unique in the history of human correspondence” because it’s from an educated man asking a woman’s opinion. An essay about this event asks how we can free young Englishmen “from the machine” and ends by quoting Thomas Browne’s “half-forgotten” remark that “the huntsmen are up in America.” The leadup to this event inspired Three Guineas. This event led to the relocation of Hogarth Press when the Woolfs’ home in Mecklenburgh Square was destroyed. For 10 points, Virginia Woolf’s suicide is often attributed to despair brought by what event that inspired “Thoughts on Peace in an Air Raid?”
World War II [or WWII; accept the Blitz or the Phoney War; prompt on the outbreak of war; reject “the Great War” or “the European War”]
[ [ 0, 198 ], [ 199, 386 ], [ 387, 569 ], [ 570, 618 ], [ 619, 728 ], [ 729, 871 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - British Literature", "category_main": "literature-british-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 51, 15 ], [ 93, 10 ], [ 101, -5 ], [ 111, -5 ], [ 112, -5 ], [ 117, -5 ], [ 118, 10 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 136, -5 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "british-literature" ] }
acf-co24-13-2_4
The leadup to this event inspired Three Guineas.
[ "Phoney War", "World War II", "Blitz", "the Blitz", "WWII", "the Phoney War" ]
acf-co24-13-2
4
An essay contrasts the “immunity” felt by Trollope and Austen with this event’s intrusion into the writer’s daily lives, and wonders if this event will end the classism of the title “Leaning Tower.” Concerns about this event inspired a three-years-late reply to a letter “perhaps unique in the history of human correspondence” because it’s from an educated man asking a woman’s opinion. An essay about this event asks how we can free young Englishmen “from the machine” and ends by quoting Thomas Browne’s “half-forgotten” remark that “the huntsmen are up in America.” The leadup to this event inspired Three Guineas. This event led to the relocation of Hogarth Press when the Woolfs’ home in Mecklenburgh Square was destroyed. For 10 points, Virginia Woolf’s suicide is often attributed to despair brought by what event that inspired “Thoughts on Peace in an Air Raid?”
World War II [or WWII; accept the Blitz or the Phoney War; prompt on the outbreak of war; reject “the Great War” or “the European War”]
[ [ 0, 198 ], [ 199, 386 ], [ 387, 569 ], [ 570, 618 ], [ 619, 728 ], [ 729, 871 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - British Literature", "category_main": "literature-british-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 51, 15 ], [ 93, 10 ], [ 101, -5 ], [ 111, -5 ], [ 112, -5 ], [ 117, -5 ], [ 118, 10 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 136, -5 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "british-literature" ] }
acf-co24-13-2_5
This event led to the relocation of Hogarth Press when the Woolfs’ home in Mecklenburgh Square was destroyed.
[ "Phoney War", "World War II", "Blitz", "the Blitz", "WWII", "the Phoney War" ]
acf-co24-13-2
5
An essay contrasts the “immunity” felt by Trollope and Austen with this event’s intrusion into the writer’s daily lives, and wonders if this event will end the classism of the title “Leaning Tower.” Concerns about this event inspired a three-years-late reply to a letter “perhaps unique in the history of human correspondence” because it’s from an educated man asking a woman’s opinion. An essay about this event asks how we can free young Englishmen “from the machine” and ends by quoting Thomas Browne’s “half-forgotten” remark that “the huntsmen are up in America.” The leadup to this event inspired Three Guineas. This event led to the relocation of Hogarth Press when the Woolfs’ home in Mecklenburgh Square was destroyed. For 10 points, Virginia Woolf’s suicide is often attributed to despair brought by what event that inspired “Thoughts on Peace in an Air Raid?”
World War II [or WWII; accept the Blitz or the Phoney War; prompt on the outbreak of war; reject “the Great War” or “the European War”]
[ [ 0, 198 ], [ 199, 386 ], [ 387, 569 ], [ 570, 618 ], [ 619, 728 ], [ 729, 871 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - British Literature", "category_main": "literature-british-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 51, 15 ], [ 93, 10 ], [ 101, -5 ], [ 111, -5 ], [ 112, -5 ], [ 117, -5 ], [ 118, 10 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 136, -5 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "british-literature" ] }
acf-co24-13-2_6
For 10 points, Virginia Woolf’s suicide is often attributed to despair brought by what event that inspired “Thoughts on Peace in an Air Raid?”
[ "Phoney War", "World War II", "Blitz", "the Blitz", "WWII", "the Phoney War" ]
acf-co24-13-2
6
An essay contrasts the “immunity” felt by Trollope and Austen with this event’s intrusion into the writer’s daily lives, and wonders if this event will end the classism of the title “Leaning Tower.” Concerns about this event inspired a three-years-late reply to a letter “perhaps unique in the history of human correspondence” because it’s from an educated man asking a woman’s opinion. An essay about this event asks how we can free young Englishmen “from the machine” and ends by quoting Thomas Browne’s “half-forgotten” remark that “the huntsmen are up in America.” The leadup to this event inspired Three Guineas. This event led to the relocation of Hogarth Press when the Woolfs’ home in Mecklenburgh Square was destroyed. For 10 points, Virginia Woolf’s suicide is often attributed to despair brought by what event that inspired “Thoughts on Peace in an Air Raid?”
World War II [or WWII; accept the Blitz or the Phoney War; prompt on the outbreak of war; reject “the Great War” or “the European War”]
[ [ 0, 198 ], [ 199, 386 ], [ 387, 569 ], [ 570, 618 ], [ 619, 728 ], [ 729, 871 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - British Literature", "category_main": "literature-british-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 51, 15 ], [ 93, 10 ], [ 101, -5 ], [ 111, -5 ], [ 112, -5 ], [ 117, -5 ], [ 118, 10 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 136, -5 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "british-literature" ] }
acf-co24-13-3_1
On the appeal of the freedman Louis Napoleon, a member of this family won the freedom of eight slaves in the 1852 “Lemmon Slave Case.”
[ "John Jay", "Jay family", "William Jay", "Jay" ]
acf-co24-13-3
1
On the appeal of the freedman Louis Napoleon, a member of this family won the freedom of eight slaves in the 1852 “Lemmon Slave Case.” This family included William, the conservative abolitionist author of Condition of the Free People of Color, and his father, who founded the African Free School as the first president of the New York Manumission Society. A member of this family signed the 1799 Act for the Gradual Abolition of Slavery as Governor of New York and outraged Southern states with his unratified treaty with Diego de Gardoqui. A judge from this family argued that citizens could sue a state in his majority opinion for Chisholm v. Georgia. Alexander Hamilton misattributed James Madison’s argument for the Three-fifths Compromise in Federalist 54 to a member of this family, the third author of the papers. For 10 points, name this family of the first Chief Justice.
Jay family [accept John Jay or William Jay]
[ [ 0, 134 ], [ 135, 355 ], [ 356, 541 ], [ 542, 654 ], [ 655, 821 ], [ 822, 881 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - American History", "category_main": "history-american-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 94, 10 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 121, -5 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 139, 10 ], [ 139, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 144, 10 ], [ 148, 10 ], [ 148, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "american-history" ] }
acf-co24-13-3_2
This family included William, the conservative abolitionist author of Condition of the Free People of Color, and his father, who founded the African Free School as the first president of the New York Manumission Society.
[ "John Jay", "Jay family", "William Jay", "Jay" ]
acf-co24-13-3
2
On the appeal of the freedman Louis Napoleon, a member of this family won the freedom of eight slaves in the 1852 “Lemmon Slave Case.” This family included William, the conservative abolitionist author of Condition of the Free People of Color, and his father, who founded the African Free School as the first president of the New York Manumission Society. A member of this family signed the 1799 Act for the Gradual Abolition of Slavery as Governor of New York and outraged Southern states with his unratified treaty with Diego de Gardoqui. A judge from this family argued that citizens could sue a state in his majority opinion for Chisholm v. Georgia. Alexander Hamilton misattributed James Madison’s argument for the Three-fifths Compromise in Federalist 54 to a member of this family, the third author of the papers. For 10 points, name this family of the first Chief Justice.
Jay family [accept John Jay or William Jay]
[ [ 0, 134 ], [ 135, 355 ], [ 356, 541 ], [ 542, 654 ], [ 655, 821 ], [ 822, 881 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - American History", "category_main": "history-american-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 94, 10 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 121, -5 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 139, 10 ], [ 139, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 144, 10 ], [ 148, 10 ], [ 148, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "american-history" ] }
acf-co24-13-3_3
A member of this family signed the 1799 Act for the Gradual Abolition of Slavery as Governor of New York and outraged Southern states with his unratified treaty with Diego de Gardoqui.
[ "John Jay", "Jay family", "William Jay", "Jay" ]
acf-co24-13-3
3
On the appeal of the freedman Louis Napoleon, a member of this family won the freedom of eight slaves in the 1852 “Lemmon Slave Case.” This family included William, the conservative abolitionist author of Condition of the Free People of Color, and his father, who founded the African Free School as the first president of the New York Manumission Society. A member of this family signed the 1799 Act for the Gradual Abolition of Slavery as Governor of New York and outraged Southern states with his unratified treaty with Diego de Gardoqui. A judge from this family argued that citizens could sue a state in his majority opinion for Chisholm v. Georgia. Alexander Hamilton misattributed James Madison’s argument for the Three-fifths Compromise in Federalist 54 to a member of this family, the third author of the papers. For 10 points, name this family of the first Chief Justice.
Jay family [accept John Jay or William Jay]
[ [ 0, 134 ], [ 135, 355 ], [ 356, 541 ], [ 542, 654 ], [ 655, 821 ], [ 822, 881 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - American History", "category_main": "history-american-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 94, 10 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 121, -5 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 139, 10 ], [ 139, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 144, 10 ], [ 148, 10 ], [ 148, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "american-history" ] }
acf-co24-13-3_4
A judge from this family argued that citizens could sue a state in his majority opinion for Chisholm v. Georgia.
[ "John Jay", "Jay family", "William Jay", "Jay" ]
acf-co24-13-3
4
On the appeal of the freedman Louis Napoleon, a member of this family won the freedom of eight slaves in the 1852 “Lemmon Slave Case.” This family included William, the conservative abolitionist author of Condition of the Free People of Color, and his father, who founded the African Free School as the first president of the New York Manumission Society. A member of this family signed the 1799 Act for the Gradual Abolition of Slavery as Governor of New York and outraged Southern states with his unratified treaty with Diego de Gardoqui. A judge from this family argued that citizens could sue a state in his majority opinion for Chisholm v. Georgia. Alexander Hamilton misattributed James Madison’s argument for the Three-fifths Compromise in Federalist 54 to a member of this family, the third author of the papers. For 10 points, name this family of the first Chief Justice.
Jay family [accept John Jay or William Jay]
[ [ 0, 134 ], [ 135, 355 ], [ 356, 541 ], [ 542, 654 ], [ 655, 821 ], [ 822, 881 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - American History", "category_main": "history-american-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 94, 10 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 121, -5 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 139, 10 ], [ 139, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 144, 10 ], [ 148, 10 ], [ 148, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "american-history" ] }
acf-co24-13-3_5
Alexander Hamilton misattributed James Madison’s argument for the Three-fifths Compromise in Federalist 54 to a member of this family, the third author of the papers.
[ "John Jay", "Jay family", "William Jay", "Jay" ]
acf-co24-13-3
5
On the appeal of the freedman Louis Napoleon, a member of this family won the freedom of eight slaves in the 1852 “Lemmon Slave Case.” This family included William, the conservative abolitionist author of Condition of the Free People of Color, and his father, who founded the African Free School as the first president of the New York Manumission Society. A member of this family signed the 1799 Act for the Gradual Abolition of Slavery as Governor of New York and outraged Southern states with his unratified treaty with Diego de Gardoqui. A judge from this family argued that citizens could sue a state in his majority opinion for Chisholm v. Georgia. Alexander Hamilton misattributed James Madison’s argument for the Three-fifths Compromise in Federalist 54 to a member of this family, the third author of the papers. For 10 points, name this family of the first Chief Justice.
Jay family [accept John Jay or William Jay]
[ [ 0, 134 ], [ 135, 355 ], [ 356, 541 ], [ 542, 654 ], [ 655, 821 ], [ 822, 881 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - American History", "category_main": "history-american-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 94, 10 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 121, -5 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 139, 10 ], [ 139, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 144, 10 ], [ 148, 10 ], [ 148, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "american-history" ] }
acf-co24-13-3_6
For 10 points, name this family of the first Chief Justice.
[ "John Jay", "Jay family", "William Jay", "Jay" ]
acf-co24-13-3
6
On the appeal of the freedman Louis Napoleon, a member of this family won the freedom of eight slaves in the 1852 “Lemmon Slave Case.” This family included William, the conservative abolitionist author of Condition of the Free People of Color, and his father, who founded the African Free School as the first president of the New York Manumission Society. A member of this family signed the 1799 Act for the Gradual Abolition of Slavery as Governor of New York and outraged Southern states with his unratified treaty with Diego de Gardoqui. A judge from this family argued that citizens could sue a state in his majority opinion for Chisholm v. Georgia. Alexander Hamilton misattributed James Madison’s argument for the Three-fifths Compromise in Federalist 54 to a member of this family, the third author of the papers. For 10 points, name this family of the first Chief Justice.
Jay family [accept John Jay or William Jay]
[ [ 0, 134 ], [ 135, 355 ], [ 356, 541 ], [ 542, 654 ], [ 655, 821 ], [ 822, 881 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - American History", "category_main": "history-american-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 94, 10 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 121, -5 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 139, 10 ], [ 139, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 144, 10 ], [ 148, 10 ], [ 148, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "american-history" ] }
acf-co24-13-4_1
An equivalence denoted by this adjective in which two actors have the same ties is, along with automorphic and regular equivalence, a standard notion of similarity in networks.
[ "structure", "structural", "structured", "word forms like structure" ]
acf-co24-13-4
1
An equivalence denoted by this adjective in which two actors have the same ties is, along with automorphic and regular equivalence, a standard notion of similarity in networks. The CUSUM and Chow tests can be used to identify this type of “break” in a time series. Vector autoregressions denoted by this adjective have uncorrelated errors but relate contemporaneous variables, unlike reduced-form VARs. Ronald Burt theorized that “brokers” who exploit “holes” denoted by this adjective can accrue social capital. Broadly, econometric models denoted by this adjective relate exogenous and endogenous variables via “deep” parameters and, like simultaneous equation models, are abbreviated SEMs. For 10 points, what adjective appears first in a two-word sociological framework that emphasizes societal complexity, in which it precedes “functionalism”?
structural [or word forms like structure or structured]
[ [ 0, 176 ], [ 177, 264 ], [ 265, 402 ], [ 403, 513 ], [ 514, 693 ], [ 694, 849 ] ]
{ "category": "social-science", "category_full": "Social Science - Social Science", "category_main": "social-science", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 45, 15 ], [ 73, 10 ], [ 73, 10 ], [ 73, 10 ], [ 73, 10 ], [ 77, 10 ], [ 77, 10 ], [ 84, 10 ], [ 93, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 121, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "social-science" ] }
acf-co24-13-4_2
The CUSUM and Chow tests can be used to identify this type of “break” in a time series.
[ "structure", "structural", "structured", "word forms like structure" ]
acf-co24-13-4
2
An equivalence denoted by this adjective in which two actors have the same ties is, along with automorphic and regular equivalence, a standard notion of similarity in networks. The CUSUM and Chow tests can be used to identify this type of “break” in a time series. Vector autoregressions denoted by this adjective have uncorrelated errors but relate contemporaneous variables, unlike reduced-form VARs. Ronald Burt theorized that “brokers” who exploit “holes” denoted by this adjective can accrue social capital. Broadly, econometric models denoted by this adjective relate exogenous and endogenous variables via “deep” parameters and, like simultaneous equation models, are abbreviated SEMs. For 10 points, what adjective appears first in a two-word sociological framework that emphasizes societal complexity, in which it precedes “functionalism”?
structural [or word forms like structure or structured]
[ [ 0, 176 ], [ 177, 264 ], [ 265, 402 ], [ 403, 513 ], [ 514, 693 ], [ 694, 849 ] ]
{ "category": "social-science", "category_full": "Social Science - Social Science", "category_main": "social-science", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 45, 15 ], [ 73, 10 ], [ 73, 10 ], [ 73, 10 ], [ 73, 10 ], [ 77, 10 ], [ 77, 10 ], [ 84, 10 ], [ 93, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 121, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "social-science" ] }
acf-co24-13-4_3
Vector autoregressions denoted by this adjective have uncorrelated errors but relate contemporaneous variables, unlike reduced-form VARs.
[ "structure", "structural", "structured", "word forms like structure" ]
acf-co24-13-4
3
An equivalence denoted by this adjective in which two actors have the same ties is, along with automorphic and regular equivalence, a standard notion of similarity in networks. The CUSUM and Chow tests can be used to identify this type of “break” in a time series. Vector autoregressions denoted by this adjective have uncorrelated errors but relate contemporaneous variables, unlike reduced-form VARs. Ronald Burt theorized that “brokers” who exploit “holes” denoted by this adjective can accrue social capital. Broadly, econometric models denoted by this adjective relate exogenous and endogenous variables via “deep” parameters and, like simultaneous equation models, are abbreviated SEMs. For 10 points, what adjective appears first in a two-word sociological framework that emphasizes societal complexity, in which it precedes “functionalism”?
structural [or word forms like structure or structured]
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acf-co24-13-4_4
Ronald Burt theorized that “brokers” who exploit “holes” denoted by this adjective can accrue social capital.
[ "structure", "structural", "structured", "word forms like structure" ]
acf-co24-13-4
4
An equivalence denoted by this adjective in which two actors have the same ties is, along with automorphic and regular equivalence, a standard notion of similarity in networks. The CUSUM and Chow tests can be used to identify this type of “break” in a time series. Vector autoregressions denoted by this adjective have uncorrelated errors but relate contemporaneous variables, unlike reduced-form VARs. Ronald Burt theorized that “brokers” who exploit “holes” denoted by this adjective can accrue social capital. Broadly, econometric models denoted by this adjective relate exogenous and endogenous variables via “deep” parameters and, like simultaneous equation models, are abbreviated SEMs. For 10 points, what adjective appears first in a two-word sociological framework that emphasizes societal complexity, in which it precedes “functionalism”?
structural [or word forms like structure or structured]
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{ "category": "social-science", "category_full": "Social Science - Social Science", "category_main": "social-science", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 45, 15 ], [ 73, 10 ], [ 73, 10 ], [ 73, 10 ], [ 73, 10 ], [ 77, 10 ], [ 77, 10 ], [ 84, 10 ], [ 93, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 121, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "social-science" ] }
acf-co24-13-4_5
Broadly, econometric models denoted by this adjective relate exogenous and endogenous variables via “deep” parameters and, like simultaneous equation models, are abbreviated SEMs.
[ "structure", "structural", "structured", "word forms like structure" ]
acf-co24-13-4
5
An equivalence denoted by this adjective in which two actors have the same ties is, along with automorphic and regular equivalence, a standard notion of similarity in networks. The CUSUM and Chow tests can be used to identify this type of “break” in a time series. Vector autoregressions denoted by this adjective have uncorrelated errors but relate contemporaneous variables, unlike reduced-form VARs. Ronald Burt theorized that “brokers” who exploit “holes” denoted by this adjective can accrue social capital. Broadly, econometric models denoted by this adjective relate exogenous and endogenous variables via “deep” parameters and, like simultaneous equation models, are abbreviated SEMs. For 10 points, what adjective appears first in a two-word sociological framework that emphasizes societal complexity, in which it precedes “functionalism”?
structural [or word forms like structure or structured]
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{ "category": "social-science", "category_full": "Social Science - Social Science", "category_main": "social-science", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 45, 15 ], [ 73, 10 ], [ 73, 10 ], [ 73, 10 ], [ 73, 10 ], [ 77, 10 ], [ 77, 10 ], [ 84, 10 ], [ 93, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 121, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "social-science" ] }
acf-co24-13-4_6
For 10 points, what adjective appears first in a two-word sociological framework that emphasizes societal complexity, in which it precedes “functionalism”?
[ "structure", "structural", "structured", "word forms like structure" ]
acf-co24-13-4
6
An equivalence denoted by this adjective in which two actors have the same ties is, along with automorphic and regular equivalence, a standard notion of similarity in networks. The CUSUM and Chow tests can be used to identify this type of “break” in a time series. Vector autoregressions denoted by this adjective have uncorrelated errors but relate contemporaneous variables, unlike reduced-form VARs. Ronald Burt theorized that “brokers” who exploit “holes” denoted by this adjective can accrue social capital. Broadly, econometric models denoted by this adjective relate exogenous and endogenous variables via “deep” parameters and, like simultaneous equation models, are abbreviated SEMs. For 10 points, what adjective appears first in a two-word sociological framework that emphasizes societal complexity, in which it precedes “functionalism”?
structural [or word forms like structure or structured]
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acf-co24-13-5_1
This is the heaviest element for which a solid trimethyl source is used to react it with group V materials in the MOVPE process.
[ "indium", "In" ]
acf-co24-13-5
1
This is the heaviest element for which a solid trimethyl source is used to react it with group V materials in the MOVPE process. A lab at Oregon discovered a pigment in which this element and yttrium help expose the intense blue color of plus-3 manganese ions. The most common sources for this high-demand p-block element are leaching from zinc sulfide ores and recovery after its most notable compound is etched onto glass and wafers. This is the second of four elements in the name of a flexible semiconductor that competes with amorphous silicon and cadmium telluride for use in thin-film solar cells. Aluminum-doped zinc oxide is a cheaper alternative to a compound containing this metal and tin that is deposited to create transparent conducting films. This metal is named for the blue-violet line in its spectrum. For 10 points, name this metal found in LCDs as its tin oxide.
indium [or In] (The pigment is YInMn Blue, and the solar cell material is CIGS, or copper indium gallium selenide.)
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acf-co24-13-5_2
A lab at Oregon discovered a pigment in which this element and yttrium help expose the intense blue color of plus-3 manganese ions.
[ "indium", "In" ]
acf-co24-13-5
2
This is the heaviest element for which a solid trimethyl source is used to react it with group V materials in the MOVPE process. A lab at Oregon discovered a pigment in which this element and yttrium help expose the intense blue color of plus-3 manganese ions. The most common sources for this high-demand p-block element are leaching from zinc sulfide ores and recovery after its most notable compound is etched onto glass and wafers. This is the second of four elements in the name of a flexible semiconductor that competes with amorphous silicon and cadmium telluride for use in thin-film solar cells. Aluminum-doped zinc oxide is a cheaper alternative to a compound containing this metal and tin that is deposited to create transparent conducting films. This metal is named for the blue-violet line in its spectrum. For 10 points, name this metal found in LCDs as its tin oxide.
indium [or In] (The pigment is YInMn Blue, and the solar cell material is CIGS, or copper indium gallium selenide.)
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acf-co24-13-5_3
The most common sources for this high-demand p-block element are leaching from zinc sulfide ores and recovery after its most notable compound is etched onto glass and wafers.
[ "indium", "In" ]
acf-co24-13-5
3
This is the heaviest element for which a solid trimethyl source is used to react it with group V materials in the MOVPE process. A lab at Oregon discovered a pigment in which this element and yttrium help expose the intense blue color of plus-3 manganese ions. The most common sources for this high-demand p-block element are leaching from zinc sulfide ores and recovery after its most notable compound is etched onto glass and wafers. This is the second of four elements in the name of a flexible semiconductor that competes with amorphous silicon and cadmium telluride for use in thin-film solar cells. Aluminum-doped zinc oxide is a cheaper alternative to a compound containing this metal and tin that is deposited to create transparent conducting films. This metal is named for the blue-violet line in its spectrum. For 10 points, name this metal found in LCDs as its tin oxide.
indium [or In] (The pigment is YInMn Blue, and the solar cell material is CIGS, or copper indium gallium selenide.)
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acf-co24-13-5_4
This is the second of four elements in the name of a flexible semiconductor that competes with amorphous silicon and cadmium telluride for use in thin-film solar cells.
[ "indium", "In" ]
acf-co24-13-5
4
This is the heaviest element for which a solid trimethyl source is used to react it with group V materials in the MOVPE process. A lab at Oregon discovered a pigment in which this element and yttrium help expose the intense blue color of plus-3 manganese ions. The most common sources for this high-demand p-block element are leaching from zinc sulfide ores and recovery after its most notable compound is etched onto glass and wafers. This is the second of four elements in the name of a flexible semiconductor that competes with amorphous silicon and cadmium telluride for use in thin-film solar cells. Aluminum-doped zinc oxide is a cheaper alternative to a compound containing this metal and tin that is deposited to create transparent conducting films. This metal is named for the blue-violet line in its spectrum. For 10 points, name this metal found in LCDs as its tin oxide.
indium [or In] (The pigment is YInMn Blue, and the solar cell material is CIGS, or copper indium gallium selenide.)
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acf-co24-13-5_5
Aluminum-doped zinc oxide is a cheaper alternative to a compound containing this metal and tin that is deposited to create transparent conducting films.
[ "indium", "In" ]
acf-co24-13-5
5
This is the heaviest element for which a solid trimethyl source is used to react it with group V materials in the MOVPE process. A lab at Oregon discovered a pigment in which this element and yttrium help expose the intense blue color of plus-3 manganese ions. The most common sources for this high-demand p-block element are leaching from zinc sulfide ores and recovery after its most notable compound is etched onto glass and wafers. This is the second of four elements in the name of a flexible semiconductor that competes with amorphous silicon and cadmium telluride for use in thin-film solar cells. Aluminum-doped zinc oxide is a cheaper alternative to a compound containing this metal and tin that is deposited to create transparent conducting films. This metal is named for the blue-violet line in its spectrum. For 10 points, name this metal found in LCDs as its tin oxide.
indium [or In] (The pigment is YInMn Blue, and the solar cell material is CIGS, or copper indium gallium selenide.)
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acf-co24-13-5_6
This metal is named for the blue-violet line in its spectrum.
[ "indium", "In" ]
acf-co24-13-5
6
This is the heaviest element for which a solid trimethyl source is used to react it with group V materials in the MOVPE process. A lab at Oregon discovered a pigment in which this element and yttrium help expose the intense blue color of plus-3 manganese ions. The most common sources for this high-demand p-block element are leaching from zinc sulfide ores and recovery after its most notable compound is etched onto glass and wafers. This is the second of four elements in the name of a flexible semiconductor that competes with amorphous silicon and cadmium telluride for use in thin-film solar cells. Aluminum-doped zinc oxide is a cheaper alternative to a compound containing this metal and tin that is deposited to create transparent conducting films. This metal is named for the blue-violet line in its spectrum. For 10 points, name this metal found in LCDs as its tin oxide.
indium [or In] (The pigment is YInMn Blue, and the solar cell material is CIGS, or copper indium gallium selenide.)
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acf-co24-13-5_7
For 10 points, name this metal found in LCDs as its tin oxide.
[ "indium", "In" ]
acf-co24-13-5
7
This is the heaviest element for which a solid trimethyl source is used to react it with group V materials in the MOVPE process. A lab at Oregon discovered a pigment in which this element and yttrium help expose the intense blue color of plus-3 manganese ions. The most common sources for this high-demand p-block element are leaching from zinc sulfide ores and recovery after its most notable compound is etched onto glass and wafers. This is the second of four elements in the name of a flexible semiconductor that competes with amorphous silicon and cadmium telluride for use in thin-film solar cells. Aluminum-doped zinc oxide is a cheaper alternative to a compound containing this metal and tin that is deposited to create transparent conducting films. This metal is named for the blue-violet line in its spectrum. For 10 points, name this metal found in LCDs as its tin oxide.
indium [or In] (The pigment is YInMn Blue, and the solar cell material is CIGS, or copper indium gallium selenide.)
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acf-co24-13-6_1
A poem about the defeat of this mythical figure was argued to be the source of the Iliad in Wolfgang Schadewaldt’s neoanalysis.
[ "Memnon", "Colossi of Memnon" ]
acf-co24-13-6
1
A poem about the defeat of this mythical figure was argued to be the source of the Iliad in Wolfgang Schadewaldt’s neoanalysis. This mythical figure was the namesake of the rhetorician Herodes Atticus’s adopted child, as well as the addressee of three epigrams carved by Julia Balbilla. This figure’s early appearances as a king of Susa are detailed in a Frank M. Snowden book. In the Metamorphoses, a flock of birds annually reenacts this figure’s death after rising from the ashes of his funeral pyre. Roman tourists flocked to a statue named for this figure that would “sing” when struck by the rising sun’s rays. This son of Eos and Tithonus kills Nestor’s son Antilochus after arriving at Troy with his massive army in the Posthomerica. For 10 points, name this Ethiopian king to whom the ancients attributed Amenhotep III’s “colossi.”
Memnon [accept Colossi of Memnon] (The Snowden book is Blacks in Antiquity.)
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{ "category": "mythology", "category_full": "Mythology - Mythology", "category_main": "mythology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 30, 15 ], [ 84, 15 ], [ 86, 10 ], [ 87, 10 ], [ 97, -5 ], [ 104, 10 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 114, 10 ], [ 125, -5 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "mythology" ] }
acf-co24-13-6_2
This mythical figure was the namesake of the rhetorician Herodes Atticus’s adopted child, as well as the addressee of three epigrams carved by Julia Balbilla.
[ "Memnon", "Colossi of Memnon" ]
acf-co24-13-6
2
A poem about the defeat of this mythical figure was argued to be the source of the Iliad in Wolfgang Schadewaldt’s neoanalysis. This mythical figure was the namesake of the rhetorician Herodes Atticus’s adopted child, as well as the addressee of three epigrams carved by Julia Balbilla. This figure’s early appearances as a king of Susa are detailed in a Frank M. Snowden book. In the Metamorphoses, a flock of birds annually reenacts this figure’s death after rising from the ashes of his funeral pyre. Roman tourists flocked to a statue named for this figure that would “sing” when struck by the rising sun’s rays. This son of Eos and Tithonus kills Nestor’s son Antilochus after arriving at Troy with his massive army in the Posthomerica. For 10 points, name this Ethiopian king to whom the ancients attributed Amenhotep III’s “colossi.”
Memnon [accept Colossi of Memnon] (The Snowden book is Blacks in Antiquity.)
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{ "category": "mythology", "category_full": "Mythology - Mythology", "category_main": "mythology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 30, 15 ], [ 84, 15 ], [ 86, 10 ], [ 87, 10 ], [ 97, -5 ], [ 104, 10 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 114, 10 ], [ 125, -5 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "mythology" ] }
acf-co24-13-6_3
This figure’s early appearances as a king of Susa are detailed in a Frank M. Snowden book.
[ "Memnon", "Colossi of Memnon" ]
acf-co24-13-6
3
A poem about the defeat of this mythical figure was argued to be the source of the Iliad in Wolfgang Schadewaldt’s neoanalysis. This mythical figure was the namesake of the rhetorician Herodes Atticus’s adopted child, as well as the addressee of three epigrams carved by Julia Balbilla. This figure’s early appearances as a king of Susa are detailed in a Frank M. Snowden book. In the Metamorphoses, a flock of birds annually reenacts this figure’s death after rising from the ashes of his funeral pyre. Roman tourists flocked to a statue named for this figure that would “sing” when struck by the rising sun’s rays. This son of Eos and Tithonus kills Nestor’s son Antilochus after arriving at Troy with his massive army in the Posthomerica. For 10 points, name this Ethiopian king to whom the ancients attributed Amenhotep III’s “colossi.”
Memnon [accept Colossi of Memnon] (The Snowden book is Blacks in Antiquity.)
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{ "category": "mythology", "category_full": "Mythology - Mythology", "category_main": "mythology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 30, 15 ], [ 84, 15 ], [ 86, 10 ], [ 87, 10 ], [ 97, -5 ], [ 104, 10 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 114, 10 ], [ 125, -5 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "mythology" ] }
acf-co24-13-6_4
In the Metamorphoses, a flock of birds annually reenacts this figure’s death after rising from the ashes of his funeral pyre.
[ "Memnon", "Colossi of Memnon" ]
acf-co24-13-6
4
A poem about the defeat of this mythical figure was argued to be the source of the Iliad in Wolfgang Schadewaldt’s neoanalysis. This mythical figure was the namesake of the rhetorician Herodes Atticus’s adopted child, as well as the addressee of three epigrams carved by Julia Balbilla. This figure’s early appearances as a king of Susa are detailed in a Frank M. Snowden book. In the Metamorphoses, a flock of birds annually reenacts this figure’s death after rising from the ashes of his funeral pyre. Roman tourists flocked to a statue named for this figure that would “sing” when struck by the rising sun’s rays. This son of Eos and Tithonus kills Nestor’s son Antilochus after arriving at Troy with his massive army in the Posthomerica. For 10 points, name this Ethiopian king to whom the ancients attributed Amenhotep III’s “colossi.”
Memnon [accept Colossi of Memnon] (The Snowden book is Blacks in Antiquity.)
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{ "category": "mythology", "category_full": "Mythology - Mythology", "category_main": "mythology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 30, 15 ], [ 84, 15 ], [ 86, 10 ], [ 87, 10 ], [ 97, -5 ], [ 104, 10 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 114, 10 ], [ 125, -5 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "mythology" ] }
acf-co24-13-6_5
Roman tourists flocked to a statue named for this figure that would “sing” when struck by the rising sun’s rays.
[ "Memnon", "Colossi of Memnon" ]
acf-co24-13-6
5
A poem about the defeat of this mythical figure was argued to be the source of the Iliad in Wolfgang Schadewaldt’s neoanalysis. This mythical figure was the namesake of the rhetorician Herodes Atticus’s adopted child, as well as the addressee of three epigrams carved by Julia Balbilla. This figure’s early appearances as a king of Susa are detailed in a Frank M. Snowden book. In the Metamorphoses, a flock of birds annually reenacts this figure’s death after rising from the ashes of his funeral pyre. Roman tourists flocked to a statue named for this figure that would “sing” when struck by the rising sun’s rays. This son of Eos and Tithonus kills Nestor’s son Antilochus after arriving at Troy with his massive army in the Posthomerica. For 10 points, name this Ethiopian king to whom the ancients attributed Amenhotep III’s “colossi.”
Memnon [accept Colossi of Memnon] (The Snowden book is Blacks in Antiquity.)
[ [ 0, 127 ], [ 128, 286 ], [ 287, 377 ], [ 378, 503 ], [ 504, 617 ], [ 618, 742 ], [ 743, 841 ] ]
{ "category": "mythology", "category_full": "Mythology - Mythology", "category_main": "mythology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 30, 15 ], [ 84, 15 ], [ 86, 10 ], [ 87, 10 ], [ 97, -5 ], [ 104, 10 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 114, 10 ], [ 125, -5 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "mythology" ] }
acf-co24-13-6_6
This son of Eos and Tithonus kills Nestor’s son Antilochus after arriving at Troy with his massive army in the Posthomerica.
[ "Memnon", "Colossi of Memnon" ]
acf-co24-13-6
6
A poem about the defeat of this mythical figure was argued to be the source of the Iliad in Wolfgang Schadewaldt’s neoanalysis. This mythical figure was the namesake of the rhetorician Herodes Atticus’s adopted child, as well as the addressee of three epigrams carved by Julia Balbilla. This figure’s early appearances as a king of Susa are detailed in a Frank M. Snowden book. In the Metamorphoses, a flock of birds annually reenacts this figure’s death after rising from the ashes of his funeral pyre. Roman tourists flocked to a statue named for this figure that would “sing” when struck by the rising sun’s rays. This son of Eos and Tithonus kills Nestor’s son Antilochus after arriving at Troy with his massive army in the Posthomerica. For 10 points, name this Ethiopian king to whom the ancients attributed Amenhotep III’s “colossi.”
Memnon [accept Colossi of Memnon] (The Snowden book is Blacks in Antiquity.)
[ [ 0, 127 ], [ 128, 286 ], [ 287, 377 ], [ 378, 503 ], [ 504, 617 ], [ 618, 742 ], [ 743, 841 ] ]
{ "category": "mythology", "category_full": "Mythology - Mythology", "category_main": "mythology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 30, 15 ], [ 84, 15 ], [ 86, 10 ], [ 87, 10 ], [ 97, -5 ], [ 104, 10 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 114, 10 ], [ 125, -5 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "mythology" ] }
acf-co24-13-6_7
For 10 points, name this Ethiopian king to whom the ancients attributed Amenhotep III’s “colossi.”
[ "Memnon", "Colossi of Memnon" ]
acf-co24-13-6
7
A poem about the defeat of this mythical figure was argued to be the source of the Iliad in Wolfgang Schadewaldt’s neoanalysis. This mythical figure was the namesake of the rhetorician Herodes Atticus’s adopted child, as well as the addressee of three epigrams carved by Julia Balbilla. This figure’s early appearances as a king of Susa are detailed in a Frank M. Snowden book. In the Metamorphoses, a flock of birds annually reenacts this figure’s death after rising from the ashes of his funeral pyre. Roman tourists flocked to a statue named for this figure that would “sing” when struck by the rising sun’s rays. This son of Eos and Tithonus kills Nestor’s son Antilochus after arriving at Troy with his massive army in the Posthomerica. For 10 points, name this Ethiopian king to whom the ancients attributed Amenhotep III’s “colossi.”
Memnon [accept Colossi of Memnon] (The Snowden book is Blacks in Antiquity.)
[ [ 0, 127 ], [ 128, 286 ], [ 287, 377 ], [ 378, 503 ], [ 504, 617 ], [ 618, 742 ], [ 743, 841 ] ]
{ "category": "mythology", "category_full": "Mythology - Mythology", "category_main": "mythology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 30, 15 ], [ 84, 15 ], [ 86, 10 ], [ 87, 10 ], [ 97, -5 ], [ 104, 10 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 114, 10 ], [ 125, -5 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "mythology" ] }
acf-co24-13-7_1
A woman with this name was said to be the Prophecy of Merlin’s “eagle of the broken covenant” that “shall rejoice in her third nesting.”
[ "Eleanor of Aquitaine, Eleanor of Provence,", "Eleanor of Castile", "Eleanor crosses", "Eleanor Eleanor", "Eleanor", "Leonor", "Alienor" ]
acf-co24-13-7
1
A woman with this name was said to be the Prophecy of Merlin’s “eagle of the broken covenant” that “shall rejoice in her third nesting.” A woman with this name was pelted with rotten eggs by Londoners who hated her court faction of Savoyard relatives. A woman of this name wrapped Guinevere’s bones in an elaborate reburial and supposedly sucked poison from the knife wound her husband received from an assassin sent by the Emir of Jaffa. A queen of this name added to her massive land holdings via her husband’s expulsion of the Jews and is memorialized at Giddesford by one of her namesake crosses. Edward I’s Provençal mother and Castilian wife both had this first name. A queen of this name added Gascony to the Angevin empire by marrying a man called FitzEmpress, then supported her son, the Young King, in a revolt against him. For 10 points, give this name of Henry II’s wife from Aquitaine.
Eleanor [or Alienor or Leonor; accept Eleanor of Aquitaine, Eleanor of Provence, or Eleanor of Castile; accept Eleanor crosses]
[ [ 0, 136 ], [ 137, 251 ], [ 252, 438 ], [ 439, 601 ], [ 602, 674 ], [ 675, 834 ], [ 835, 899 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - European History", "category_main": "history-european-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 44, -5 ], [ 71, 15 ], [ 104, 10 ], [ 105, 10 ], [ 117, -5 ], [ 117, -5 ], [ 117, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ], [ 146, -5 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 156, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "european-history" ] }
acf-co24-13-7_2
A woman with this name was pelted with rotten eggs by Londoners who hated her court faction of Savoyard relatives.
[ "Eleanor of Aquitaine, Eleanor of Provence,", "Eleanor of Castile", "Eleanor crosses", "Eleanor Eleanor", "Eleanor", "Leonor", "Alienor" ]
acf-co24-13-7
2
A woman with this name was said to be the Prophecy of Merlin’s “eagle of the broken covenant” that “shall rejoice in her third nesting.” A woman with this name was pelted with rotten eggs by Londoners who hated her court faction of Savoyard relatives. A woman of this name wrapped Guinevere’s bones in an elaborate reburial and supposedly sucked poison from the knife wound her husband received from an assassin sent by the Emir of Jaffa. A queen of this name added to her massive land holdings via her husband’s expulsion of the Jews and is memorialized at Giddesford by one of her namesake crosses. Edward I’s Provençal mother and Castilian wife both had this first name. A queen of this name added Gascony to the Angevin empire by marrying a man called FitzEmpress, then supported her son, the Young King, in a revolt against him. For 10 points, give this name of Henry II’s wife from Aquitaine.
Eleanor [or Alienor or Leonor; accept Eleanor of Aquitaine, Eleanor of Provence, or Eleanor of Castile; accept Eleanor crosses]
[ [ 0, 136 ], [ 137, 251 ], [ 252, 438 ], [ 439, 601 ], [ 602, 674 ], [ 675, 834 ], [ 835, 899 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - European History", "category_main": "history-european-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 44, -5 ], [ 71, 15 ], [ 104, 10 ], [ 105, 10 ], [ 117, -5 ], [ 117, -5 ], [ 117, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ], [ 146, -5 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 156, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "european-history" ] }
acf-co24-13-7_3
A woman of this name wrapped Guinevere’s bones in an elaborate reburial and supposedly sucked poison from the knife wound her husband received from an assassin sent by the Emir of Jaffa.
[ "Eleanor of Aquitaine, Eleanor of Provence,", "Eleanor of Castile", "Eleanor crosses", "Eleanor Eleanor", "Eleanor", "Leonor", "Alienor" ]
acf-co24-13-7
3
A woman with this name was said to be the Prophecy of Merlin’s “eagle of the broken covenant” that “shall rejoice in her third nesting.” A woman with this name was pelted with rotten eggs by Londoners who hated her court faction of Savoyard relatives. A woman of this name wrapped Guinevere’s bones in an elaborate reburial and supposedly sucked poison from the knife wound her husband received from an assassin sent by the Emir of Jaffa. A queen of this name added to her massive land holdings via her husband’s expulsion of the Jews and is memorialized at Giddesford by one of her namesake crosses. Edward I’s Provençal mother and Castilian wife both had this first name. A queen of this name added Gascony to the Angevin empire by marrying a man called FitzEmpress, then supported her son, the Young King, in a revolt against him. For 10 points, give this name of Henry II’s wife from Aquitaine.
Eleanor [or Alienor or Leonor; accept Eleanor of Aquitaine, Eleanor of Provence, or Eleanor of Castile; accept Eleanor crosses]
[ [ 0, 136 ], [ 137, 251 ], [ 252, 438 ], [ 439, 601 ], [ 602, 674 ], [ 675, 834 ], [ 835, 899 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - European History", "category_main": "history-european-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 44, -5 ], [ 71, 15 ], [ 104, 10 ], [ 105, 10 ], [ 117, -5 ], [ 117, -5 ], [ 117, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ], [ 146, -5 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 156, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "european-history" ] }
acf-co24-13-7_4
A queen of this name added to her massive land holdings via her husband’s expulsion of the Jews and is memorialized at Giddesford by one of her namesake crosses.
[ "Eleanor of Aquitaine, Eleanor of Provence,", "Eleanor of Castile", "Eleanor crosses", "Eleanor Eleanor", "Eleanor", "Leonor", "Alienor" ]
acf-co24-13-7
4
A woman with this name was said to be the Prophecy of Merlin’s “eagle of the broken covenant” that “shall rejoice in her third nesting.” A woman with this name was pelted with rotten eggs by Londoners who hated her court faction of Savoyard relatives. A woman of this name wrapped Guinevere’s bones in an elaborate reburial and supposedly sucked poison from the knife wound her husband received from an assassin sent by the Emir of Jaffa. A queen of this name added to her massive land holdings via her husband’s expulsion of the Jews and is memorialized at Giddesford by one of her namesake crosses. Edward I’s Provençal mother and Castilian wife both had this first name. A queen of this name added Gascony to the Angevin empire by marrying a man called FitzEmpress, then supported her son, the Young King, in a revolt against him. For 10 points, give this name of Henry II’s wife from Aquitaine.
Eleanor [or Alienor or Leonor; accept Eleanor of Aquitaine, Eleanor of Provence, or Eleanor of Castile; accept Eleanor crosses]
[ [ 0, 136 ], [ 137, 251 ], [ 252, 438 ], [ 439, 601 ], [ 602, 674 ], [ 675, 834 ], [ 835, 899 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - European History", "category_main": "history-european-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 44, -5 ], [ 71, 15 ], [ 104, 10 ], [ 105, 10 ], [ 117, -5 ], [ 117, -5 ], [ 117, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ], [ 146, -5 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 156, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "european-history" ] }
acf-co24-13-7_5
Edward I’s Provençal mother and Castilian wife both had this first name.
[ "Eleanor of Aquitaine, Eleanor of Provence,", "Eleanor of Castile", "Eleanor crosses", "Eleanor Eleanor", "Eleanor", "Leonor", "Alienor" ]
acf-co24-13-7
5
A woman with this name was said to be the Prophecy of Merlin’s “eagle of the broken covenant” that “shall rejoice in her third nesting.” A woman with this name was pelted with rotten eggs by Londoners who hated her court faction of Savoyard relatives. A woman of this name wrapped Guinevere’s bones in an elaborate reburial and supposedly sucked poison from the knife wound her husband received from an assassin sent by the Emir of Jaffa. A queen of this name added to her massive land holdings via her husband’s expulsion of the Jews and is memorialized at Giddesford by one of her namesake crosses. Edward I’s Provençal mother and Castilian wife both had this first name. A queen of this name added Gascony to the Angevin empire by marrying a man called FitzEmpress, then supported her son, the Young King, in a revolt against him. For 10 points, give this name of Henry II’s wife from Aquitaine.
Eleanor [or Alienor or Leonor; accept Eleanor of Aquitaine, Eleanor of Provence, or Eleanor of Castile; accept Eleanor crosses]
[ [ 0, 136 ], [ 137, 251 ], [ 252, 438 ], [ 439, 601 ], [ 602, 674 ], [ 675, 834 ], [ 835, 899 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - European History", "category_main": "history-european-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 44, -5 ], [ 71, 15 ], [ 104, 10 ], [ 105, 10 ], [ 117, -5 ], [ 117, -5 ], [ 117, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ], [ 146, -5 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 156, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "european-history" ] }
acf-co24-13-7_6
A queen of this name added Gascony to the Angevin empire by marrying a man called FitzEmpress, then supported her son, the Young King, in a revolt against him.
[ "Eleanor of Aquitaine, Eleanor of Provence,", "Eleanor of Castile", "Eleanor crosses", "Eleanor Eleanor", "Eleanor", "Leonor", "Alienor" ]
acf-co24-13-7
6
A woman with this name was said to be the Prophecy of Merlin’s “eagle of the broken covenant” that “shall rejoice in her third nesting.” A woman with this name was pelted with rotten eggs by Londoners who hated her court faction of Savoyard relatives. A woman of this name wrapped Guinevere’s bones in an elaborate reburial and supposedly sucked poison from the knife wound her husband received from an assassin sent by the Emir of Jaffa. A queen of this name added to her massive land holdings via her husband’s expulsion of the Jews and is memorialized at Giddesford by one of her namesake crosses. Edward I’s Provençal mother and Castilian wife both had this first name. A queen of this name added Gascony to the Angevin empire by marrying a man called FitzEmpress, then supported her son, the Young King, in a revolt against him. For 10 points, give this name of Henry II’s wife from Aquitaine.
Eleanor [or Alienor or Leonor; accept Eleanor of Aquitaine, Eleanor of Provence, or Eleanor of Castile; accept Eleanor crosses]
[ [ 0, 136 ], [ 137, 251 ], [ 252, 438 ], [ 439, 601 ], [ 602, 674 ], [ 675, 834 ], [ 835, 899 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - European History", "category_main": "history-european-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 44, -5 ], [ 71, 15 ], [ 104, 10 ], [ 105, 10 ], [ 117, -5 ], [ 117, -5 ], [ 117, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ], [ 146, -5 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 156, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "european-history" ] }
acf-co24-13-7_7
For 10 points, give this name of Henry II’s wife from Aquitaine.
[ "Eleanor of Aquitaine, Eleanor of Provence,", "Eleanor of Castile", "Eleanor crosses", "Eleanor Eleanor", "Eleanor", "Leonor", "Alienor" ]
acf-co24-13-7
7
A woman with this name was said to be the Prophecy of Merlin’s “eagle of the broken covenant” that “shall rejoice in her third nesting.” A woman with this name was pelted with rotten eggs by Londoners who hated her court faction of Savoyard relatives. A woman of this name wrapped Guinevere’s bones in an elaborate reburial and supposedly sucked poison from the knife wound her husband received from an assassin sent by the Emir of Jaffa. A queen of this name added to her massive land holdings via her husband’s expulsion of the Jews and is memorialized at Giddesford by one of her namesake crosses. Edward I’s Provençal mother and Castilian wife both had this first name. A queen of this name added Gascony to the Angevin empire by marrying a man called FitzEmpress, then supported her son, the Young King, in a revolt against him. For 10 points, give this name of Henry II’s wife from Aquitaine.
Eleanor [or Alienor or Leonor; accept Eleanor of Aquitaine, Eleanor of Provence, or Eleanor of Castile; accept Eleanor crosses]
[ [ 0, 136 ], [ 137, 251 ], [ 252, 438 ], [ 439, 601 ], [ 602, 674 ], [ 675, 834 ], [ 835, 899 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - European History", "category_main": "history-european-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 44, -5 ], [ 71, 15 ], [ 104, 10 ], [ 105, 10 ], [ 117, -5 ], [ 117, -5 ], [ 117, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ], [ 146, -5 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 156, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "european-history" ] }
acf-co24-13-8_1
In a poem in this form, Master Improbable, Lord No-Such, and Sir Vacuous debate the merits of their realms’ hunting parks.
[ "Dù Fǔ", "rhapsody, rhyme-prose, prose-poem,", "Wén fù", "fù", "rhapsody prose prose", "exposition", "Zǐxū fù, Shàng lín fù,", "prose", "poetic exposition until read", "fù fù", "rhapsody", "Fǔ" ]
acf-co24-13-8
1
In a poem in this form, Master Improbable, Lord No-Such, and Sir Vacuous debate the merits of their realms’ hunting parks. A critical work on this form, which is itself titled for and written in this form, has been translated as Essay on Literature and The Art of Writing, and inspired Gary Snyder with its notion that “the model is indeed near at hand” when using an ax to carve an ax-handle. Sīmǎ Xiāngrú was a master of this “epideictic” form, which typically presented descriptions of places or objects and were recited rather than sung. This form is variously translated as “poetic exposition,” “prose-poem,” and “rhapsody.” This dominant poetic form of the Han Dynasty is a homonym in English with the given name of the poet of “Spring View,” who suggested it was better to have daughters than sons who will be “buried amid the grass.” For 10 points, identify this given name of the poet of “Ballad of The Army Carts.”
fù [accept rhapsody, rhyme-prose, prose-poem, or poetic exposition until read; accept Zǐxū fù, Shàng lín fù, or Wén fù; accept Dù Fǔ] (Wén fù is by Lù jī.)
[ [ 0, 122 ], [ 123, 393 ], [ 394, 542 ], [ 543, 630 ], [ 631, 842 ], [ 843, 925 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - World Literature", "category_main": "literature-world-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 80, 15 ], [ 103, -5 ], [ 113, 10 ], [ 122, -5 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 136, -5 ], [ 145, -5 ], [ 162, 0 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "world-literature" ] }
acf-co24-13-8_2
A critical work on this form, which is itself titled for and written in this form, has been translated as Essay on Literature and The Art of Writing, and inspired Gary Snyder with its notion that “the model is indeed near at hand” when using an ax to carve an ax-handle.
[ "Dù Fǔ", "rhapsody, rhyme-prose, prose-poem,", "Wén fù", "fù", "rhapsody prose prose", "exposition", "Zǐxū fù, Shàng lín fù,", "prose", "poetic exposition until read", "fù fù", "rhapsody", "Fǔ" ]
acf-co24-13-8
2
In a poem in this form, Master Improbable, Lord No-Such, and Sir Vacuous debate the merits of their realms’ hunting parks. A critical work on this form, which is itself titled for and written in this form, has been translated as Essay on Literature and The Art of Writing, and inspired Gary Snyder with its notion that “the model is indeed near at hand” when using an ax to carve an ax-handle. Sīmǎ Xiāngrú was a master of this “epideictic” form, which typically presented descriptions of places or objects and were recited rather than sung. This form is variously translated as “poetic exposition,” “prose-poem,” and “rhapsody.” This dominant poetic form of the Han Dynasty is a homonym in English with the given name of the poet of “Spring View,” who suggested it was better to have daughters than sons who will be “buried amid the grass.” For 10 points, identify this given name of the poet of “Ballad of The Army Carts.”
fù [accept rhapsody, rhyme-prose, prose-poem, or poetic exposition until read; accept Zǐxū fù, Shàng lín fù, or Wén fù; accept Dù Fǔ] (Wén fù is by Lù jī.)
[ [ 0, 122 ], [ 123, 393 ], [ 394, 542 ], [ 543, 630 ], [ 631, 842 ], [ 843, 925 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - World Literature", "category_main": "literature-world-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 80, 15 ], [ 103, -5 ], [ 113, 10 ], [ 122, -5 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 136, -5 ], [ 145, -5 ], [ 162, 0 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "world-literature" ] }
acf-co24-13-8_3
Sīmǎ Xiāngrú was a master of this “epideictic” form, which typically presented descriptions of places or objects and were recited rather than sung.
[ "Dù Fǔ", "rhapsody, rhyme-prose, prose-poem,", "Wén fù", "fù", "rhapsody prose prose", "exposition", "Zǐxū fù, Shàng lín fù,", "prose", "poetic exposition until read", "fù fù", "rhapsody", "Fǔ" ]
acf-co24-13-8
3
In a poem in this form, Master Improbable, Lord No-Such, and Sir Vacuous debate the merits of their realms’ hunting parks. A critical work on this form, which is itself titled for and written in this form, has been translated as Essay on Literature and The Art of Writing, and inspired Gary Snyder with its notion that “the model is indeed near at hand” when using an ax to carve an ax-handle. Sīmǎ Xiāngrú was a master of this “epideictic” form, which typically presented descriptions of places or objects and were recited rather than sung. This form is variously translated as “poetic exposition,” “prose-poem,” and “rhapsody.” This dominant poetic form of the Han Dynasty is a homonym in English with the given name of the poet of “Spring View,” who suggested it was better to have daughters than sons who will be “buried amid the grass.” For 10 points, identify this given name of the poet of “Ballad of The Army Carts.”
fù [accept rhapsody, rhyme-prose, prose-poem, or poetic exposition until read; accept Zǐxū fù, Shàng lín fù, or Wén fù; accept Dù Fǔ] (Wén fù is by Lù jī.)
[ [ 0, 122 ], [ 123, 393 ], [ 394, 542 ], [ 543, 630 ], [ 631, 842 ], [ 843, 925 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - World Literature", "category_main": "literature-world-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 80, 15 ], [ 103, -5 ], [ 113, 10 ], [ 122, -5 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 136, -5 ], [ 145, -5 ], [ 162, 0 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "world-literature" ] }
acf-co24-13-8_4
This form is variously translated as “poetic exposition,” “prose-poem,” and “rhapsody.”
[ "Dù Fǔ", "rhapsody, rhyme-prose, prose-poem,", "Wén fù", "fù", "rhapsody prose prose", "exposition", "Zǐxū fù, Shàng lín fù,", "prose", "poetic exposition until read", "fù fù", "rhapsody", "Fǔ" ]
acf-co24-13-8
4
In a poem in this form, Master Improbable, Lord No-Such, and Sir Vacuous debate the merits of their realms’ hunting parks. A critical work on this form, which is itself titled for and written in this form, has been translated as Essay on Literature and The Art of Writing, and inspired Gary Snyder with its notion that “the model is indeed near at hand” when using an ax to carve an ax-handle. Sīmǎ Xiāngrú was a master of this “epideictic” form, which typically presented descriptions of places or objects and were recited rather than sung. This form is variously translated as “poetic exposition,” “prose-poem,” and “rhapsody.” This dominant poetic form of the Han Dynasty is a homonym in English with the given name of the poet of “Spring View,” who suggested it was better to have daughters than sons who will be “buried amid the grass.” For 10 points, identify this given name of the poet of “Ballad of The Army Carts.”
fù [accept rhapsody, rhyme-prose, prose-poem, or poetic exposition until read; accept Zǐxū fù, Shàng lín fù, or Wén fù; accept Dù Fǔ] (Wén fù is by Lù jī.)
[ [ 0, 122 ], [ 123, 393 ], [ 394, 542 ], [ 543, 630 ], [ 631, 842 ], [ 843, 925 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - World Literature", "category_main": "literature-world-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 80, 15 ], [ 103, -5 ], [ 113, 10 ], [ 122, -5 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 136, -5 ], [ 145, -5 ], [ 162, 0 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "world-literature" ] }
acf-co24-13-8_5
This dominant poetic form of the Han Dynasty is a homonym in English with the given name of the poet of “Spring View,” who suggested it was better to have daughters than sons who will be “buried amid the grass.”
[ "Dù Fǔ", "rhapsody, rhyme-prose, prose-poem,", "Wén fù", "fù", "rhapsody prose prose", "exposition", "Zǐxū fù, Shàng lín fù,", "prose", "poetic exposition until read", "fù fù", "rhapsody", "Fǔ" ]
acf-co24-13-8
5
In a poem in this form, Master Improbable, Lord No-Such, and Sir Vacuous debate the merits of their realms’ hunting parks. A critical work on this form, which is itself titled for and written in this form, has been translated as Essay on Literature and The Art of Writing, and inspired Gary Snyder with its notion that “the model is indeed near at hand” when using an ax to carve an ax-handle. Sīmǎ Xiāngrú was a master of this “epideictic” form, which typically presented descriptions of places or objects and were recited rather than sung. This form is variously translated as “poetic exposition,” “prose-poem,” and “rhapsody.” This dominant poetic form of the Han Dynasty is a homonym in English with the given name of the poet of “Spring View,” who suggested it was better to have daughters than sons who will be “buried amid the grass.” For 10 points, identify this given name of the poet of “Ballad of The Army Carts.”
fù [accept rhapsody, rhyme-prose, prose-poem, or poetic exposition until read; accept Zǐxū fù, Shàng lín fù, or Wén fù; accept Dù Fǔ] (Wén fù is by Lù jī.)
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{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - World Literature", "category_main": "literature-world-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 80, 15 ], [ 103, -5 ], [ 113, 10 ], [ 122, -5 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 136, -5 ], [ 145, -5 ], [ 162, 0 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "world-literature" ] }
acf-co24-13-8_6
For 10 points, identify this given name of the poet of “Ballad of The Army Carts.”
[ "Dù Fǔ", "rhapsody, rhyme-prose, prose-poem,", "Wén fù", "fù", "rhapsody prose prose", "exposition", "Zǐxū fù, Shàng lín fù,", "prose", "poetic exposition until read", "fù fù", "rhapsody", "Fǔ" ]
acf-co24-13-8
6
In a poem in this form, Master Improbable, Lord No-Such, and Sir Vacuous debate the merits of their realms’ hunting parks. A critical work on this form, which is itself titled for and written in this form, has been translated as Essay on Literature and The Art of Writing, and inspired Gary Snyder with its notion that “the model is indeed near at hand” when using an ax to carve an ax-handle. Sīmǎ Xiāngrú was a master of this “epideictic” form, which typically presented descriptions of places or objects and were recited rather than sung. This form is variously translated as “poetic exposition,” “prose-poem,” and “rhapsody.” This dominant poetic form of the Han Dynasty is a homonym in English with the given name of the poet of “Spring View,” who suggested it was better to have daughters than sons who will be “buried amid the grass.” For 10 points, identify this given name of the poet of “Ballad of The Army Carts.”
fù [accept rhapsody, rhyme-prose, prose-poem, or poetic exposition until read; accept Zǐxū fù, Shàng lín fù, or Wén fù; accept Dù Fǔ] (Wén fù is by Lù jī.)
[ [ 0, 122 ], [ 123, 393 ], [ 394, 542 ], [ 543, 630 ], [ 631, 842 ], [ 843, 925 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - World Literature", "category_main": "literature-world-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 80, 15 ], [ 103, -5 ], [ 113, 10 ], [ 122, -5 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 136, -5 ], [ 145, -5 ], [ 162, 0 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ], [ 162, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "world-literature" ] }
acf-co24-13-9_1
This artist said of Peru, “the desert is more desert” and called Inca stonework “the finest thing I saw from the hand of man” on a trip that also produced a painting of Machu Picchu in “the morning light.”
[ "Georgia O’Keeffe", "O’Keeffe" ]
acf-co24-13-9
1
This artist said of Peru, “the desert is more desert” and called Inca stonework “the finest thing I saw from the hand of man” on a trip that also produced a painting of Machu Picchu in “the morning light.” It’s not Joseph Cornell, but this artist wrote a letter to a young Yayoi Kusama that gave her the confidence to move to New York. This artist received an all-expenses-paid trip to Hawaii for an ad campaign but produced no relevant paintings, forcing Dole to ship her a reference pineapple in the mail. The view from a plane inspired this painter to create a series that includes a painting at the Art Institute of Chicago that was on loan there for 10 years because it was too large to fit into the SFMOMA. This artist of the Sky Above Clouds series spent four decades at her adobe home in Abiquiú. For 10 points, name this artist who painted many massive landscapes at her summer home in Ghost Ranch.
Georgia O’Keeffe
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{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Painting and Sculpture", "category_main": "fine-arts-painting-and-sculpture", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 69, -5 ], [ 75, 15 ], [ 85, 10 ], [ 87, 10 ], [ 91, -5 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 105, -5 ], [ 106, 10 ], [ 112, 10 ], [ 112, 10 ], [ 113, 10 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 167, 10 ], [ 167, 10 ], [ 167, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "painting-and-sculpture" ] }
acf-co24-13-9_2
It’s not Joseph Cornell, but this artist wrote a letter to a young Yayoi Kusama that gave her the confidence to move to New York.
[ "Georgia O’Keeffe", "O’Keeffe" ]
acf-co24-13-9
2
This artist said of Peru, “the desert is more desert” and called Inca stonework “the finest thing I saw from the hand of man” on a trip that also produced a painting of Machu Picchu in “the morning light.” It’s not Joseph Cornell, but this artist wrote a letter to a young Yayoi Kusama that gave her the confidence to move to New York. This artist received an all-expenses-paid trip to Hawaii for an ad campaign but produced no relevant paintings, forcing Dole to ship her a reference pineapple in the mail. The view from a plane inspired this painter to create a series that includes a painting at the Art Institute of Chicago that was on loan there for 10 years because it was too large to fit into the SFMOMA. This artist of the Sky Above Clouds series spent four decades at her adobe home in Abiquiú. For 10 points, name this artist who painted many massive landscapes at her summer home in Ghost Ranch.
Georgia O’Keeffe
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{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Painting and Sculpture", "category_main": "fine-arts-painting-and-sculpture", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 69, -5 ], [ 75, 15 ], [ 85, 10 ], [ 87, 10 ], [ 91, -5 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 105, -5 ], [ 106, 10 ], [ 112, 10 ], [ 112, 10 ], [ 113, 10 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 167, 10 ], [ 167, 10 ], [ 167, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "painting-and-sculpture" ] }
acf-co24-13-9_3
This artist received an all-expenses-paid trip to Hawaii for an ad campaign but produced no relevant paintings, forcing Dole to ship her a reference pineapple in the mail.
[ "Georgia O’Keeffe", "O’Keeffe" ]
acf-co24-13-9
3
This artist said of Peru, “the desert is more desert” and called Inca stonework “the finest thing I saw from the hand of man” on a trip that also produced a painting of Machu Picchu in “the morning light.” It’s not Joseph Cornell, but this artist wrote a letter to a young Yayoi Kusama that gave her the confidence to move to New York. This artist received an all-expenses-paid trip to Hawaii for an ad campaign but produced no relevant paintings, forcing Dole to ship her a reference pineapple in the mail. The view from a plane inspired this painter to create a series that includes a painting at the Art Institute of Chicago that was on loan there for 10 years because it was too large to fit into the SFMOMA. This artist of the Sky Above Clouds series spent four decades at her adobe home in Abiquiú. For 10 points, name this artist who painted many massive landscapes at her summer home in Ghost Ranch.
Georgia O’Keeffe
[ [ 0, 205 ], [ 206, 335 ], [ 336, 508 ], [ 509, 713 ], [ 714, 805 ], [ 806, 908 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Painting and Sculpture", "category_main": "fine-arts-painting-and-sculpture", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 69, -5 ], [ 75, 15 ], [ 85, 10 ], [ 87, 10 ], [ 91, -5 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 105, -5 ], [ 106, 10 ], [ 112, 10 ], [ 112, 10 ], [ 113, 10 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 167, 10 ], [ 167, 10 ], [ 167, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "painting-and-sculpture" ] }
acf-co24-13-9_4
The view from a plane inspired this painter to create a series that includes a painting at the Art Institute of Chicago that was on loan there for 10 years because it was too large to fit into the SFMOMA.
[ "Georgia O’Keeffe", "O’Keeffe" ]
acf-co24-13-9
4
This artist said of Peru, “the desert is more desert” and called Inca stonework “the finest thing I saw from the hand of man” on a trip that also produced a painting of Machu Picchu in “the morning light.” It’s not Joseph Cornell, but this artist wrote a letter to a young Yayoi Kusama that gave her the confidence to move to New York. This artist received an all-expenses-paid trip to Hawaii for an ad campaign but produced no relevant paintings, forcing Dole to ship her a reference pineapple in the mail. The view from a plane inspired this painter to create a series that includes a painting at the Art Institute of Chicago that was on loan there for 10 years because it was too large to fit into the SFMOMA. This artist of the Sky Above Clouds series spent four decades at her adobe home in Abiquiú. For 10 points, name this artist who painted many massive landscapes at her summer home in Ghost Ranch.
Georgia O’Keeffe
[ [ 0, 205 ], [ 206, 335 ], [ 336, 508 ], [ 509, 713 ], [ 714, 805 ], [ 806, 908 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Painting and Sculpture", "category_main": "fine-arts-painting-and-sculpture", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 69, -5 ], [ 75, 15 ], [ 85, 10 ], [ 87, 10 ], [ 91, -5 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 105, -5 ], [ 106, 10 ], [ 112, 10 ], [ 112, 10 ], [ 113, 10 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 167, 10 ], [ 167, 10 ], [ 167, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "painting-and-sculpture" ] }
acf-co24-13-9_5
This artist of the Sky Above Clouds series spent four decades at her adobe home in Abiquiú.
[ "Georgia O’Keeffe", "O’Keeffe" ]
acf-co24-13-9
5
This artist said of Peru, “the desert is more desert” and called Inca stonework “the finest thing I saw from the hand of man” on a trip that also produced a painting of Machu Picchu in “the morning light.” It’s not Joseph Cornell, but this artist wrote a letter to a young Yayoi Kusama that gave her the confidence to move to New York. This artist received an all-expenses-paid trip to Hawaii for an ad campaign but produced no relevant paintings, forcing Dole to ship her a reference pineapple in the mail. The view from a plane inspired this painter to create a series that includes a painting at the Art Institute of Chicago that was on loan there for 10 years because it was too large to fit into the SFMOMA. This artist of the Sky Above Clouds series spent four decades at her adobe home in Abiquiú. For 10 points, name this artist who painted many massive landscapes at her summer home in Ghost Ranch.
Georgia O’Keeffe
[ [ 0, 205 ], [ 206, 335 ], [ 336, 508 ], [ 509, 713 ], [ 714, 805 ], [ 806, 908 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Painting and Sculpture", "category_main": "fine-arts-painting-and-sculpture", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 69, -5 ], [ 75, 15 ], [ 85, 10 ], [ 87, 10 ], [ 91, -5 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 105, -5 ], [ 106, 10 ], [ 112, 10 ], [ 112, 10 ], [ 113, 10 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 167, 10 ], [ 167, 10 ], [ 167, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "painting-and-sculpture" ] }
acf-co24-13-9_6
For 10 points, name this artist who painted many massive landscapes at her summer home in Ghost Ranch.
[ "Georgia O’Keeffe", "O’Keeffe" ]
acf-co24-13-9
6
This artist said of Peru, “the desert is more desert” and called Inca stonework “the finest thing I saw from the hand of man” on a trip that also produced a painting of Machu Picchu in “the morning light.” It’s not Joseph Cornell, but this artist wrote a letter to a young Yayoi Kusama that gave her the confidence to move to New York. This artist received an all-expenses-paid trip to Hawaii for an ad campaign but produced no relevant paintings, forcing Dole to ship her a reference pineapple in the mail. The view from a plane inspired this painter to create a series that includes a painting at the Art Institute of Chicago that was on loan there for 10 years because it was too large to fit into the SFMOMA. This artist of the Sky Above Clouds series spent four decades at her adobe home in Abiquiú. For 10 points, name this artist who painted many massive landscapes at her summer home in Ghost Ranch.
Georgia O’Keeffe
[ [ 0, 205 ], [ 206, 335 ], [ 336, 508 ], [ 509, 713 ], [ 714, 805 ], [ 806, 908 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Painting and Sculpture", "category_main": "fine-arts-painting-and-sculpture", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 69, -5 ], [ 75, 15 ], [ 85, 10 ], [ 87, 10 ], [ 91, -5 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 105, -5 ], [ 106, 10 ], [ 112, 10 ], [ 112, 10 ], [ 113, 10 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 167, 10 ], [ 167, 10 ], [ 167, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "painting-and-sculpture" ] }
acf-co24-13-10_1
A mixture of chloral hydrate, phenol, and mercuric chloride colors this substance blue-green or magenta in Alexander’s stain.
[ "pollen grains", "pollen", "pollen cores", "pollen tubes" ]
acf-co24-13-10
1
A mixture of chloral hydrate, phenol, and mercuric chloride colors this substance blue-green or magenta in Alexander’s stain. Either the nuclear stain TTC or the dye fluorescein diacetate are used in viability assays for this substance. In vitro culture of this substance uses a “hanging drop” technique in which individual drops of boron-rich media are loaded with it and placed into a cavity slide. Auramine and calcofluor stain this substance’s exine and intine layers, respectively, which begin to form after four callose walls are degraded. The enzyme callase and the protein RAFTIN are supplied by Ubisch bodies from the tapetum to strengthen this substance. The relative location of the stomium determines if this substance undergoes “extrorse” or “introrse” dehiscence from the anther. For 10 points, the pistil receives what substance that contains male gametes?
pollen [or pollen grains; accept pollen cores or pollen tubes]
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{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Biology", "category_main": "science-biology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 84, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 126, 10 ], [ 127, 10 ], [ 127, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "biology" ] }
acf-co24-13-10_2
Either the nuclear stain TTC or the dye fluorescein diacetate are used in viability assays for this substance.
[ "pollen grains", "pollen", "pollen cores", "pollen tubes" ]
acf-co24-13-10
2
A mixture of chloral hydrate, phenol, and mercuric chloride colors this substance blue-green or magenta in Alexander’s stain. Either the nuclear stain TTC or the dye fluorescein diacetate are used in viability assays for this substance. In vitro culture of this substance uses a “hanging drop” technique in which individual drops of boron-rich media are loaded with it and placed into a cavity slide. Auramine and calcofluor stain this substance’s exine and intine layers, respectively, which begin to form after four callose walls are degraded. The enzyme callase and the protein RAFTIN are supplied by Ubisch bodies from the tapetum to strengthen this substance. The relative location of the stomium determines if this substance undergoes “extrorse” or “introrse” dehiscence from the anther. For 10 points, the pistil receives what substance that contains male gametes?
pollen [or pollen grains; accept pollen cores or pollen tubes]
[ [ 0, 125 ], [ 126, 236 ], [ 237, 400 ], [ 401, 546 ], [ 547, 665 ], [ 666, 794 ], [ 795, 872 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Biology", "category_main": "science-biology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 84, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 126, 10 ], [ 127, 10 ], [ 127, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "biology" ] }
acf-co24-13-10_3
In vitro culture of this substance uses a “hanging drop” technique in which individual drops of boron-rich media are loaded with it and placed into a cavity slide.
[ "pollen grains", "pollen", "pollen cores", "pollen tubes" ]
acf-co24-13-10
3
A mixture of chloral hydrate, phenol, and mercuric chloride colors this substance blue-green or magenta in Alexander’s stain. Either the nuclear stain TTC or the dye fluorescein diacetate are used in viability assays for this substance. In vitro culture of this substance uses a “hanging drop” technique in which individual drops of boron-rich media are loaded with it and placed into a cavity slide. Auramine and calcofluor stain this substance’s exine and intine layers, respectively, which begin to form after four callose walls are degraded. The enzyme callase and the protein RAFTIN are supplied by Ubisch bodies from the tapetum to strengthen this substance. The relative location of the stomium determines if this substance undergoes “extrorse” or “introrse” dehiscence from the anther. For 10 points, the pistil receives what substance that contains male gametes?
pollen [or pollen grains; accept pollen cores or pollen tubes]
[ [ 0, 125 ], [ 126, 236 ], [ 237, 400 ], [ 401, 546 ], [ 547, 665 ], [ 666, 794 ], [ 795, 872 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Biology", "category_main": "science-biology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 84, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 126, 10 ], [ 127, 10 ], [ 127, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "biology" ] }
acf-co24-13-10_4
Auramine and calcofluor stain this substance’s exine and intine layers, respectively, which begin to form after four callose walls are degraded.
[ "pollen grains", "pollen", "pollen cores", "pollen tubes" ]
acf-co24-13-10
4
A mixture of chloral hydrate, phenol, and mercuric chloride colors this substance blue-green or magenta in Alexander’s stain. Either the nuclear stain TTC or the dye fluorescein diacetate are used in viability assays for this substance. In vitro culture of this substance uses a “hanging drop” technique in which individual drops of boron-rich media are loaded with it and placed into a cavity slide. Auramine and calcofluor stain this substance’s exine and intine layers, respectively, which begin to form after four callose walls are degraded. The enzyme callase and the protein RAFTIN are supplied by Ubisch bodies from the tapetum to strengthen this substance. The relative location of the stomium determines if this substance undergoes “extrorse” or “introrse” dehiscence from the anther. For 10 points, the pistil receives what substance that contains male gametes?
pollen [or pollen grains; accept pollen cores or pollen tubes]
[ [ 0, 125 ], [ 126, 236 ], [ 237, 400 ], [ 401, 546 ], [ 547, 665 ], [ 666, 794 ], [ 795, 872 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Biology", "category_main": "science-biology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 84, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 126, 10 ], [ 127, 10 ], [ 127, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "biology" ] }
acf-co24-13-10_5
The enzyme callase and the protein RAFTIN are supplied by Ubisch bodies from the tapetum to strengthen this substance.
[ "pollen grains", "pollen", "pollen cores", "pollen tubes" ]
acf-co24-13-10
5
A mixture of chloral hydrate, phenol, and mercuric chloride colors this substance blue-green or magenta in Alexander’s stain. Either the nuclear stain TTC or the dye fluorescein diacetate are used in viability assays for this substance. In vitro culture of this substance uses a “hanging drop” technique in which individual drops of boron-rich media are loaded with it and placed into a cavity slide. Auramine and calcofluor stain this substance’s exine and intine layers, respectively, which begin to form after four callose walls are degraded. The enzyme callase and the protein RAFTIN are supplied by Ubisch bodies from the tapetum to strengthen this substance. The relative location of the stomium determines if this substance undergoes “extrorse” or “introrse” dehiscence from the anther. For 10 points, the pistil receives what substance that contains male gametes?
pollen [or pollen grains; accept pollen cores or pollen tubes]
[ [ 0, 125 ], [ 126, 236 ], [ 237, 400 ], [ 401, 546 ], [ 547, 665 ], [ 666, 794 ], [ 795, 872 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Biology", "category_main": "science-biology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 84, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 126, 10 ], [ 127, 10 ], [ 127, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "biology" ] }
acf-co24-13-10_6
The relative location of the stomium determines if this substance undergoes “extrorse” or “introrse” dehiscence from the anther.
[ "pollen grains", "pollen", "pollen cores", "pollen tubes" ]
acf-co24-13-10
6
A mixture of chloral hydrate, phenol, and mercuric chloride colors this substance blue-green or magenta in Alexander’s stain. Either the nuclear stain TTC or the dye fluorescein diacetate are used in viability assays for this substance. In vitro culture of this substance uses a “hanging drop” technique in which individual drops of boron-rich media are loaded with it and placed into a cavity slide. Auramine and calcofluor stain this substance’s exine and intine layers, respectively, which begin to form after four callose walls are degraded. The enzyme callase and the protein RAFTIN are supplied by Ubisch bodies from the tapetum to strengthen this substance. The relative location of the stomium determines if this substance undergoes “extrorse” or “introrse” dehiscence from the anther. For 10 points, the pistil receives what substance that contains male gametes?
pollen [or pollen grains; accept pollen cores or pollen tubes]
[ [ 0, 125 ], [ 126, 236 ], [ 237, 400 ], [ 401, 546 ], [ 547, 665 ], [ 666, 794 ], [ 795, 872 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Biology", "category_main": "science-biology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 84, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 126, 10 ], [ 127, 10 ], [ 127, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet M. Editors 7", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "biology" ] }
acf-co24-13-10_7
For 10 points, the pistil receives what substance that contains male gametes?
[ "pollen grains", "pollen", "pollen cores", "pollen tubes" ]
acf-co24-13-10
7
A mixture of chloral hydrate, phenol, and mercuric chloride colors this substance blue-green or magenta in Alexander’s stain. Either the nuclear stain TTC or the dye fluorescein diacetate are used in viability assays for this substance. In vitro culture of this substance uses a “hanging drop” technique in which individual drops of boron-rich media are loaded with it and placed into a cavity slide. Auramine and calcofluor stain this substance’s exine and intine layers, respectively, which begin to form after four callose walls are degraded. The enzyme callase and the protein RAFTIN are supplied by Ubisch bodies from the tapetum to strengthen this substance. The relative location of the stomium determines if this substance undergoes “extrorse” or “introrse” dehiscence from the anther. For 10 points, the pistil receives what substance that contains male gametes?
pollen [or pollen grains; accept pollen cores or pollen tubes]
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acf-co24-13-11_1
A mass grave from a town of this group near Lake Issyk Kul is the earliest evidence of the bubonic plague.
[ "Syriac", "Assyrian", "Nestorian", "Nestorian Stele", "Assyrian Church of the East", "Nestorian Church", "Church of the East", "East Syriac Church", "East" ]
acf-co24-13-11
1
A mass grave from a town of this group near Lake Issyk Kul is the earliest evidence of the bubonic plague. A leader of this group transcribed his debate with the Abbasid caliph al-Mahdi. While traveling with this group’s future leader Yahballaha to meet Honorius IV, a member of this group documented the Sicilian Vespers and an eruption of Etna. This religious group included the Keraite princess who led the “Toluid revolution,” Sorghaghtani Beki, her uncle Toghrul, and her niece Doquz Khatun, who got Hulagu to spare this group during the sack of Baghdad. Táng Tàizōng’s patronage of this religious group under Alopen is recorded on the Xī’ān stele. The Yuán emissary Rabban Bar Sauma was part of this group, whose prevalence led to the Prester John legends. For 10 points, name this Christian church often misleadingly named for a 5th-century heresiarch.
Church of the East [or Nestorian Church; or East Syriac Church; or Assyrian Church of the East; accept Nestorian Stele; prompt on Eastern Christianity; prompt on Syriac Christians] (The second sentence refers to Patriarch Timothy I of Seleucia-Ctesiphon.)
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