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Which band's song was used as the theme at the Pepsi Arena on January 8, 2006? | The song was also featured in the "Project Gotham Racing 4". | 0 |
Which band's song was used as the theme at the Pepsi Arena on January 8, 2006? | The musical video for the song was filmed in an abandoned hospital in which some scenes from the 1984 horror film "A Nightmare on Elm Street" were filmed. | 0 |
Which band's song was used as the theme at the Pepsi Arena on January 8, 2006? | "Stricken" was used as official theme for WWE's PPV New Year's Revolution, in 2006. | 1 |
Which band's song was used as the theme at the Pepsi Arena on January 8, 2006? | New Year's Revolution (2006) was the second annual New Year's Revolution pay-per-view (PPV) event produced by World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE). | 1 |
Which band's song was used as the theme at the Pepsi Arena on January 8, 2006? | It took place on January 8, 2006, at the Pepsi Arena in Albany, New York and starred talent from the Raw brand. | 1 |
Which band's song was used as the theme at the Pepsi Arena on January 8, 2006? | It combines Hindustani and English, and literally meaning "This Heart Desires More", which later became a popular slogan. | 0 |
Which band's song was used as the theme at the Pepsi Arena on January 8, 2006? | The closing theme is "Tsukishirube" (月導 ) by Yuuka Nanri. | 0 |
The Colts' first ever draft pick was a halfback who won the Heisman Trophy in what year? | This is a list of NFL Draft selections by the Indianapolis Colts. | 0 |
The Colts' first ever draft pick was a halfback who won the Heisman Trophy in what year? | The first draft that the current incarnation of the Colts franchise participated in was 1953, in which they made halfback Billy Vessels of Oklahoma their first ever selection. | 1 |
The Colts' first ever draft pick was a halfback who won the Heisman Trophy in what year? | Billy Dale Vessels (March 22, 1931 – November 17, 2001) was a gridiron football player. | 0 |
The Colts' first ever draft pick was a halfback who won the Heisman Trophy in what year? | He played college football at the University of Oklahoma and won the Heisman Trophy in 1952. | 1 |
The Colts' first ever draft pick was a halfback who won the Heisman Trophy in what year? | Vessels went on to play professional football with the National Football League's Baltimore Colts and the Western Interprovincial Football Union's Edmonton Eskimos. | 0 |
The Colts' first ever draft pick was a halfback who won the Heisman Trophy in what year? | As a senior, Manning won numerous awards. | 0 |
The Colts' first ever draft pick was a halfback who won the Heisman Trophy in what year? | He was the first ever draft pick for the Seattle Seahawks and the second player taken in the 1976 NFL Draft. | 0 |
The Colts' first ever draft pick was a halfback who won the Heisman Trophy in what year? | John W. "Zero" Drake (March 27, 1916 – March 26, 1973) was an American football player. | 0 |
The Colts' first ever draft pick was a halfback who won the Heisman Trophy in what year? | Kevin Durell Edwards (born October 30, 1965) is a retired American professional basketball player who currently serves as DePaul University men's basketball team's director of community, corporate, and professional relations. | 0 |
The Colts' first ever draft pick was a halfback who won the Heisman Trophy in what year? | He was the first round pick (10th overall) by the Cleveland Rams, their first ever draft pick, in the 1937 NFL Draft. | 0 |
The Grand Lodge of the Republic of Liberia is based on a branch of North American Freemasonry founded on what date? | Prince Hall Freemasonry is a branch of North American Freemasonry founded by Prince Hall on September 29, 1784 and composed predominantly of African Americans. | 1 |
The Grand Lodge of the Republic of Liberia is based on a branch of North American Freemasonry founded on what date? | There are two main branches of Prince Hall Freemasonry: the independent State Prince Hall Grand Lodges, most of which are recognized by Regular Masonic jurisdictions and those under the jurisdiction of the National Grand Lodge. | 0 |
The Grand Lodge of the Republic of Liberia is based on a branch of North American Freemasonry founded on what date? | The Grand Lodge of the Republic of Liberia is a fraternal organization based on the principles of Prince Hall Freemasonry. | 1 |
The Grand Lodge of the Republic of Liberia is based on a branch of North American Freemasonry founded on what date? | Prior to 1980, its membership tended to consist of Americo-Liberians and it was influential within the ruling True Whig party from its founding until the coup of Samuel Doe in 1980, when much of its senior leadership was killed and the new military regime banned masonic activities in the country. | 0 |
The Grand Lodge of the Republic of Liberia is based on a branch of North American Freemasonry founded on what date? | Activity ground to a halt some time in the 1730s, but was revived with renewed vigour in 1761. | 0 |
The Grand Lodge of the Republic of Liberia is based on a branch of North American Freemasonry founded on what date? | The Grand Lodge of All England "Meeting since Time Immemorial in the City of York" was a body of Freemasons which existed intermittently during the Eighteenth Century, mainly based in the City of York. | 0 |
The Grand Lodge of the Republic of Liberia is based on a branch of North American Freemasonry founded on what date? | The American Canadian Grand Lodge arose initially from "Square and Compass" clubs founded by US and Canadian Masons serving in occupied postwar Germany. | 0 |
The Grand Lodge of the Republic of Liberia is based on a branch of North American Freemasonry founded on what date? | It does not appear to have been a regulatory body in the usual manner of a masonic Grand Lodge, and as such is seen as a "Mother Lodge" like Kilwinning in Scotland. | 0 |
The first female board member for the Liberal Party, she was born in which county in Norway? | Betzy Alexandra Kjelsberg (1 November 1866 – 3 October 1950), born "Betzy Aleksandra Børresen", was a Norwegian politician for the Liberal Party, being the first female board member of the party, Norway's first female factory inspector from 1910–1936, and a member of the feminist movement. | 1 |
The first female board member for the Liberal Party, she was born in which county in Norway? | Kjelsberg was born in Svelvik, Vestfold. | 1 |
The first female board member for the Liberal Party, she was born in which county in Norway? | Her father was Norwegian, while her mother was from Scotland. | 0 |
The first female board member for the Liberal Party, she was born in which county in Norway? | After her father died, the family moved to Drammen, where Betzy's mother married a merchant from the town. | 0 |
The first female board member for the Liberal Party, she was born in which county in Norway? | However, he had to close his shop, forcing them to move to Christiania (today Oslo). | 0 |
The first female board member for the Liberal Party, she was born in which county in Norway? | While living there, she started her examen artium, as one of the first women in Norway to do so, but she never actually finished it due to the poor economy of her stepfather. | 0 |
The first female board member for the Liberal Party, she was born in which county in Norway? | Instead, she fell in love with Oluf Fredrik Kjelsberg, a jurist, with whom she had six children. | 0 |
The first female board member for the Liberal Party, she was born in which county in Norway? | Kjelsberg is the great-grandmother of Siv Jensen, the leader of the Norwegian Progress Party. | 0 |
The first female board member for the Liberal Party, she was born in which county in Norway? | Vestfold ] is a county in Norway, bordering Buskerud and Telemark. | 1 |
The first female board member for the Liberal Party, she was born in which county in Norway? | The county administration is in Tønsberg, and the largest city is Sandefjord. | 0 |
The first female board member for the Liberal Party, she was born in which county in Norway? | With the exception of Oslo county, Vestfold is the smallest county in Norway by area. | 0 |
The first female board member for the Liberal Party, she was born in which county in Norway? | The organization is divided into campus and riding clubs and led by a 16-member executive board. | 0 |
The first female board member for the Liberal Party, she was born in which county in Norway? | The Party, which had its roots in various earlier political movements, came together in the period immediately prior to the 1911 state election under the guidance of Sir John Forrest, the Federal member for Swan and former Premier of Western Australia, and other leading political figures in the State. | 0 |
The first female board member for the Liberal Party, she was born in which county in Norway? | It was assembled in response to the solid organisation of the Labor Party and had the aim of assisting Ministerial members in winning seats and retaining power in the Western Australian Legislative Assembly. | 0 |
The first female board member for the Liberal Party, she was born in which county in Norway? | The massive defeat of the Ministerial faction by Labor in that election resulted in what remained of the faction formally joining the Liberal Party, which became the first organised non-Labor movement in the State and was a precursor to the Nationalist Party and, later, the modern Liberal Party of Australia (Western Au... | 0 |
Mary Small served the county whose seat is what town? | Mary Small (born September 12, 1954) is an American politician from Maine. | 0 |
Mary Small served the county whose seat is what town? | A Republican, Small served in the Maine House of Representatives from 1979 to 1994 and the Maine Senate from 1994 to 2002. | 0 |
Mary Small served the county whose seat is what town? | From 2000 to 2002, Senator Small served as the Republican Floor Leader. | 0 |
Mary Small served the county whose seat is what town? | Small was unable to seek re-election in 2002 due to term-limits. | 0 |
Mary Small served the county whose seat is what town? | Small represented Bath, Maine and Sagadahoc County. | 1 |
Mary Small served the county whose seat is what town? | Sagadahoc County ( ) is a county located in the U.S. state of Maine. | 1 |
Mary Small served the county whose seat is what town? | As of the 2010 census, the population was 35,293. | 0 |
Mary Small served the county whose seat is what town? | Its county seat is Bath. | 1 |
Mary Small served the county whose seat is what town? | In geographic area, it is the smallest county in Maine. | 0 |
Mary Small served the county whose seat is what town? | The driver sits forward of this in a small compartment beside the engine space, on a chair with a spring-loaded seat that allows him to recline inside the vehicle or sit upright with his head out of the hatch. | 0 |
Mary Small served the county whose seat is what town? | He had been knighted in 1624 and served as High Sheriff of Surrey in 1645. | 0 |
Mary Small served the county whose seat is what town? | It was created on 7 February 1663 for Sir Richard Betenson. | 0 |
What 1998 film with Arthur Nascarella was directed by Tony Scott? | Arthur J. Nascarella (born November 18, 1944) is an American actor who has appeared in dozens of films, most often playing a mobster or police officer. | 0 |
What 1998 film with Arthur Nascarella was directed by Tony Scott? | Among his notable film credits include a corrupt cop in "Cop Land" (1997), the hypocritical ambulance Captain Barney in Martin Scorsese's film "Bringing Out The Dead" (1999) and fed-up casino boss, Nicky "Fingers" Bonnatto in "The Cooler" (2003). | 0 |
What 1998 film with Arthur Nascarella was directed by Tony Scott? | He's played roles in the Spike Lee joints "New Jersey Drive" (1995), "Clockers" (1995), "He Got Game" (1998), and "Summer of Sam" (1999). | 0 |
What 1998 film with Arthur Nascarella was directed by Tony Scott? | He also appeared and played roles in the films "A Brooklyn State of Mind" (1997), "Witness to the Mob" (1998), "Happiness" (1998), "54" (1998), "Enemy of the State" (1998), "Knockaround Guys" (2001), "WiseGirls" (2002), "Running Scared" (2006), "World Trade Center" (2006), "Yonkers Joe" (2008), and "Solitary Man" (2009... | 1 |
What 1998 film with Arthur Nascarella was directed by Tony Scott? | Enemy of the State is a 1998 American conspiracy-thriller film directed by Tony Scott, produced by Jerry Bruckheimer, and written by David Marconi. | 1 |
What 1998 film with Arthur Nascarella was directed by Tony Scott? | The film stars Will Smith and Gene Hackman, with Jon Voight, Lisa Bonet, Gabriel Byrne, Loren Dean, Jake Busey, Barry Pepper, and Regina King in supporting roles. | 0 |
What 1998 film with Arthur Nascarella was directed by Tony Scott? | The film tells the story of a group of NSA agents conspiring to kill a Congressman and the cover up that ensues after a tape of the murder is discovered. | 0 |
What 1998 film with Arthur Nascarella was directed by Tony Scott? | It won the 2003 Ron Ridenhour Award for Truth-Telling. | 0 |
What 1998 film with Arthur Nascarella was directed by Tony Scott? | Somebody's Hero is an American 2012 family film written and directed by Darin Beckstead, starring Christopher Gorham, Susan Misner, and Arthur Nascarella. | 0 |
What 1998 film with Arthur Nascarella was directed by Tony Scott? | Loving Memory is a 1971 drama film written and directed by Tony Scott, credited as Anthony Scott. | 0 |
What 1998 film with Arthur Nascarella was directed by Tony Scott? | The American studio Fox Searchlight Pictures had bought rights to distribute Batmanglij's previous film "Sound of My Voice" and also collaborated with the director to produce "The East". | 0 |
What 1998 film with Arthur Nascarella was directed by Tony Scott? | Their corruption grows until he can no longer allow himself to stand by and do nothing. | 0 |
In the draft of the 2017–18 Phoenix Suns season, The Phoneix Suns picked which player that played one season for the Kansas Jayhawks? | The 2017–18 Phoenix Suns season will be the 50th season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA), as well as their 25th season at the Talking Stick Resort Arena. | 0 |
In the draft of the 2017–18 Phoenix Suns season, The Phoneix Suns picked which player that played one season for the Kansas Jayhawks? | It is also their third season in five years where the Suns would earn themselves a Top 5 draft pick in the NBA Draft, with them having the second straight year of gaining the #4 pick, this time being Josh Jackson. | 1 |
In the draft of the 2017–18 Phoenix Suns season, The Phoneix Suns picked which player that played one season for the Kansas Jayhawks? | Joshua O'Neal Jackson (born February 10, 1997) is an American basketball player for the Phoenix Suns of the National Basketball Association (NBA). | 0 |
In the draft of the 2017–18 Phoenix Suns season, The Phoneix Suns picked which player that played one season for the Kansas Jayhawks? | He played college basketball for one season with the Kansas Jayhawks before declaring for the 2017 NBA draft, where he was selected fourth overall by the Phoenix Suns. | 1 |
In the draft of the 2017–18 Phoenix Suns season, The Phoneix Suns picked which player that played one season for the Kansas Jayhawks? | The Suns were led by head coach John MacLeod and played all home games in Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum. | 0 |
In the draft of the 2017–18 Phoenix Suns season, The Phoneix Suns picked which player that played one season for the Kansas Jayhawks? | Alvin Gentry was head coach and the Suns played their home games at US Airways Center. | 0 |
In the draft of the 2017–18 Phoenix Suns season, The Phoneix Suns picked which player that played one season for the Kansas Jayhawks? | At 57–25, the team had finished with its best regular season record. | 0 |
In the draft of the 2017–18 Phoenix Suns season, The Phoneix Suns picked which player that played one season for the Kansas Jayhawks? | Returning home for Game 6, the demoralized Suns would lose Game 6 and the series but not before endearing a generation of fans to the Suns franchise and showcasing a basketball from the desert southwest. | 0 |
Which Byron Edmund Walker founded institution was originally controlled by the Church of England? | The University of Toronto (U of T, UToronto, or Toronto) is a public research university in Toronto, Ontario, Canada on the grounds that surround Queen's Park. | 1 |
Which Byron Edmund Walker founded institution was originally controlled by the Church of England? | It was founded by royal charter in 1827 as "King's College", the first institution of higher learning in the colony of Upper Canada. | 0 |
Which Byron Edmund Walker founded institution was originally controlled by the Church of England? | Originally controlled by the Church of England, the university assumed the present name in 1850 upon becoming a secular institution. | 1 |
Which Byron Edmund Walker founded institution was originally controlled by the Church of England? | As a collegiate university, it comprises twelve colleges, which differ in character and history, each with substantial autonomy on financial and institutional affairs. | 0 |
Which Byron Edmund Walker founded institution was originally controlled by the Church of England? | It has two satellite campuses in Scarborough and Mississauga. | 0 |
Which Byron Edmund Walker founded institution was originally controlled by the Church of England? | Sir Byron Edmund Walker, CVO (14 October 1848 – 27 March 1924) was a Canadian banker. | 1 |
Which Byron Edmund Walker founded institution was originally controlled by the Church of England? | He was the president of the Canadian Bank of Commerce from 1907 to 1924, and a generous patron of the arts, helping to found and nurture many of Canada's cultural and educational institutions, including the University of Toronto, National Gallery of Canada, the Champlain Society, Appleby College, Art Gallery of Ontario... | 1 |
Which Byron Edmund Walker founded institution was originally controlled by the Church of England? | Walker played a major role in politics, corporate marketing and philanthropy throughout the South from the 1960s to 1990s. | 0 |
Which Byron Edmund Walker founded institution was originally controlled by the Church of England? | Walker founded and was president of the former nonprofit organization Permanent End International (2003–2007), which had been devoted to ending hunger, illiteracy and environmental degradation through the dissemination of modular aquaponics systems for farming. | 0 |
Which Byron Edmund Walker founded institution was originally controlled by the Church of England? | Mark Alan Walker, Ph.D. is an Associate Professor of Philosophy at New Mexico State University, where he occupies the Richard L. Hedden Endowed Chair in Advanced Philosophical Studies. | 0 |
The weapon BFG is found in which game developed by id Software ? | The BFG is a fictional weapon found in many video game titles, mostly in first-person shooter series such as "Doom" and "Quake". | 1 |
The weapon BFG is found in which game developed by id Software ? | Doom (stylized as DOOM) is a series of first-person shooter video games developed by id Software. | 1 |
The weapon BFG is found in which game developed by id Software ? | The series focuses on the exploits of an unnamed space marine operating under the auspices of Union Aerospace Corporation (UAC), who fights hordes of demons and the undead in order to survive. | 0 |
The weapon BFG is found in which game developed by id Software ? | It was first shown as a tech demo on June 11, 2007, at the Apple Worldwide Developers Conference, and was officially announced on August 2, 2007 at QuakeCon. | 0 |
The weapon BFG is found in which game developed by id Software ? | The game featured 10 winter sporting events. | 0 |
Which court case concerned the president of the Foundation of Moral Law and a stone monument of the Ten Commandments? | Glassroth v. Moore, CV-01-T-1268-N, 229 F. Supp. | 1 |
Which court case concerned the president of the Foundation of Moral Law and a stone monument of the Ten Commandments? | 2d 1290 (M.D. Ala. 2002), and its companion case Maddox and Howard v. Moore, CV-01-T-1269-N, concern then-Alabama Supreme Court Chief Justice Roy S. Moore and a stone monument of the Ten Commandments in the rotunda of the Alabama Judicial Building in Montgomery, Alabama. | 1 |
Which court case concerned the president of the Foundation of Moral Law and a stone monument of the Ten Commandments? | Roy Stewart Moore (born February 11, 1947) is an American lawyer, politician, and former judge. | 0 |
Which court case concerned the president of the Foundation of Moral Law and a stone monument of the Ten Commandments? | He also is the founder and president of the Foundation for Moral Law. | 1 |
Which court case concerned the president of the Foundation of Moral Law and a stone monument of the Ten Commandments? | Moore is the Republican nominee in the 2017 special election to fill the United States Senate seat vacated by Jeff Sessions upon Sessions's confirmation as Attorney General of the United States. | 0 |
Which court case concerned the president of the Foundation of Moral Law and a stone monument of the Ten Commandments? | It should also be noted that Mann considered his story to be greatly superior to that of his fellow contributors, and he considered the overall book a "failure". | 0 |
Which court case concerned the president of the Foundation of Moral Law and a stone monument of the Ten Commandments? | The man who allegedly rammed the monument with his car while live streaming the crime, Michael Tate Reed, 32, of Van Buren, Arkansas, was linked to a similar incident with the Ten Commandments Monument on the Oklahoma State Capitol grounds in 2014. | 0 |
Which court case concerned the president of the Foundation of Moral Law and a stone monument of the Ten Commandments? | Examination of conscience is a review of one's past thoughts, words, actions, and omissions for the purpose of ascertaining their conformity with, or deviation from, the moral law. | 0 |
Which court case concerned the president of the Foundation of Moral Law and a stone monument of the Ten Commandments? | "The Ten Commandments" dramatizes the biblical story of the life of Moses, an adopted Egyptian prince who becomes the deliverer of his real brethren, the enslaved Hebrews, and therefore leads the Exodus to Mount Sinai, where he receives, from God, the Ten Commandments. | 0 |
The 2016 Liberty Bowl was sponsored by a company based in what city? | AutoZone is the second largest retailer of aftermarket automotive parts and accessories in the United States behind Advance Auto Parts. | 0 |
The 2016 Liberty Bowl was sponsored by a company based in what city? | Founded in 1979, AutoZone has over 6,000 stores across the United States, Mexico, and Brazil. | 0 |
The 2016 Liberty Bowl was sponsored by a company based in what city? | The company is based in Memphis, Tennessee. | 1 |
The 2016 Liberty Bowl was sponsored by a company based in what city? | The 2016 Liberty Bowl was a post-season American college football bowl game played on January 2, 2016 at Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium in Memphis, Tennessee. | 0 |
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