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Withington Pub Quiz League |
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Question Paper for 11/01/06 - set by FCEK
(to see the answers move the mouse over the blank line beneath each question whilst at the same time
pressing the select button on the mouse - when you print the page the answers show up on the printed copy)
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ROUNDS 1 to 4 - Bingo Quiz Each team member selects a number between 1 and 32 to identify the question they are to be asked. Each team must keep a check on which questions have been asked. |
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1. |
The Suffolk town of Lavenham earned its medieval wealth by being at the centre of which trade, which flourished until the 17th century? |
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Wool |
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2. |
In 2004 which actor said: “It will be a rough ride at first. I don’t look or sound like any of the others who’ve played the part. But I think people will get used to a big-eared Northerner running around in the role.”? |
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Christopher Eccleston (on becoming Dr Who) |
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3. |
To date, what has been the least populous country to host the Summer Olympic games? |
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Finland (Helsinki in 1952) |
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4. |
“Wife, Mother, Criminal” is the tag line for Mike Leigh’s 2004 film Vera Drake. What was her criminal activity? |
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She carried out abortions |
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5. |
Which daily newspaper features a fortnightly cookery column called The Commie Chef? |
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The Morning Star |
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6. |
In May 2005 in a football play-off final at the Millenium Stadium the “Shrimps” played the “Imps”. Which two clubs were involved? |
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Southend United & Lincoln City |
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7. |
Alec Guinness, Robert Carlyle, Ken Stott and Bruno Ganz have all played which real life character, either on the small or large screen? |
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Adolf Hitler |
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8. |
What Shadow Cabinet position is currently held by Andrew Lansley? |
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Shadow Health Secretary |
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9. |
If this season’s Coca Cola football championship was settled alphabetically which team would finish as champions? |
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Brighton |
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10. |
What old Norse word is used to describe a circular prehistoric stone fort found only in the far north of Scotland? |
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Broch |
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11. |
In the year 2000, four anarchist novelists in Italy co-wrote the bestselling novel Q dealing with the rise of Protestantism in Europe. The surprising but fitting pseudonym they used was the name of which English-born footballer of the 1980s? |
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Luther Blissett |
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12. |
Translate “the foundation” into Arabic. |
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Al Qaida |
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13. |
What was the highest mountain on German territory in the year 1900? |
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Mount Kilimanjaro (then in German East Africa Territory) |
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14. |
Name this South East London suburb: “Its college, founded in 1619, has Raymond Chandler, P G Wodehouse and Lord Haw-Haw amongst its old boys. Britain’s oldest public art gallery can also be found here.” |
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Dulwich |
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15. |
The Star Spangled Banner is played in Act One of which opera? |
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Madame Butterfly |
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16. |
What was the title of Denis Potter’s 1979 TV play in which adult actors were required to impersonate children? |
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Blue Remembered Hills |
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17. |
In November 2005 which successful sports celebrity died suddenly and publicly from a heart attack in Exeter? |
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Best Mate (the racehorse) |
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18. |
Render the verb “to be” into the first person (singular) future perfect. |
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"I shall have been" or "I will have been" |
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19. |
Described as having been “Saintly and heroic”, William Mompesson was the rector of which small English village in the year 1665? |
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Eyam (Derbyshire’s plague village) |
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20. |
Name both the male and female singers who sang a bitter-sweet duet in the 1987 Christmas hit single A Fairytale of New York? |
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Shane McGowan and Kirsty McColl |
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21. |
Only two elements in the periodic table end with the letter “y”. Mercury is one. Name the other. |
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Antimony |
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22. |
Who was the British Foreign Secretary between the years 1940 and 1945? |
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Anthony Eden |
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23. |
Who was King Henry VIII’s first mother-in–law? |
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Queen Isabella of Spain |
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24. |
If you sailed due north from Rathlin Island you would arrive on which Scottish island? |
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Islay |
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25. |
The following is the Latin version of the chorus of a popular 1960s song: “Fumus draco magus, incoluit mare. Lusit autumnal’illic, maritimo Hanalo.” Name the tune. |
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Puff the Magic Dragon |
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26. |
Which American novel, now considered a classic both for adults and children, was initially banned in 1884 on social grounds? According to the US library authority it was “trash fit only for the slums.” |
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The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (by Mark Twain) |
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27. |
For those that follow pagan beliefs, what type of ceremony is a handfasting? |
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A Wedding ceremony |
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28. |
Name the 3 Irish counties that end in “....ford”. |
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Wexford, Waterford & Longford |
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29. |
For which film did Meryl Streep win a best actress Oscar award in 1982? |
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Sophie’s Choice |
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30. |
What is burned in a thurible? |
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Incense |
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31. |
In British politics, what event occurred for the second time in eleven months on November 2nd 2005? |
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David Blunkett resigned from the cabinet |
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32. |
What one word links St Nicholas to the Moors Murders and a novel by Gore Vidal? |
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Myra (Bishop of Myra in present day Turkey; Myra Hindley; Myra Breckinridge) |
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ROUND 5 – “Pushing the Boundaries” The first significant letters from each answer combine, in sequence, to give the name of a renowned frontiersman (whose name is hidden after the answer to Question8) |
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1. |
Which is the deepest part of the world’s deepest ocean trench? |
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Challenger Deep |
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2. |
What is the name of the peripheral political party headed by former Labour MP George Galloway? |
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Respect |
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3. |
What was the name of the 1960s Sci-Fi television series that always started with the warning: “There is nothing wrong with your television set. Do not attempt to adjust the picture. We are controlling transmission . . .”? |
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The Outer Limits |
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4. |
The event which wiped out the dinosaurs is the boundary between the Jurassic period and which other geological period? |
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Cretaceous Period |
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5. |
What name was taken by British scientist (1824 to 1907) when raised to the peerage in 1892? He was most famous for his work on thermodynamics and low temperature physics. |
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Kelvin (William Thomson) |
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6. |
What name is given to the outermost part of the earth’s atmosphere? |
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Exosphere |
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7. |
Which city has the most northerly university in the world? |
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Tromso |
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8. |
Name the US lake in the Sierra Nevada, close to Carson City, and on the border of California and Nevada. |
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Lake Tahoe |
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and the Frontiersman was (Davy) CROCKETT |
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ROUND 6 – Hidden Theme This round has a hidden theme which is really quite simple – however, don’t expect the logic to proceed in an orderly fashion. The theme is hidden after the answer to Question 8. |
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1. |
Reveal the title of this Beatles song by completing the following verse: “We would be so happy you and me, no one there to tell us what to do. I’d like to be under the sea ...............................................” |
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“in an Octopus’s garden (with you)” |
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2. |
Louise Fletcher won a best actress Oscar award for her role in which film? |
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One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest |
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3. |
The 15th century National Trust property Knole House, once owned by Elizabeth I, lies just off the A21 to the east of which town in Kent? |
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Sevenoaks |
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4. |
Why is the Sistine Chapel so named? |
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In honour of Pope Sixtus IV who had it built |
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5. |
The name for the forward part of a ship where sailors have their quarters has become permanently abbreviated to fo’c’s’le. What is the word in full? |
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Forecastle |
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6. |
Give the exotic name of the Manchester-based comedy rock group formed in 1973 by singer Les Prior and friends. In 1978 they had a top 50 hit with Heads Down No Nonsense Mindless Boogie, which they dedicated to Status Quo morons everywhere. |
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Albertos y Los Trios Paranoias |
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7. |
What archaic word for misfortune, or the devil personified, was derived from the game of dice? |
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Deuce |
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8. |
What is the title of Thomas Pynchon’s influential, but willfully obscure, first novel published in 1963? |
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V |
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and, of course, each answer had a word, or part of a word, associated with one of the numbers between 1 and 8 |
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ROUND 7 – “Who’s that Girl? Name the songs, with the girls’ names in their titles, from which the following lyrics are taken |
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1. |
“I laughed at all of your jokes, my love you didn’t need to coax” |
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Maggie May (by Rod Stewart and the Faces) |
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2. |
“It did rain all night/The day I left the weather was bone dry/The sun was so hot I froze myself” |
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Oh Susannah (by Stephen Foster) |
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3. |
“While the sun is bright or in the darkest night/No one knows she comes and goes” |
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Ruby Tuesday (by The Rolling Stones) |
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4. |
“Say it loud and there’s music playing/Say it soft and it’s almost like praying” |
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Maria (from West Side Story by Leonard Bernstein) |
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5. |
“The light shines down the valley/The wind blows up the alley...” |
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Lying in the arms of Mary (by the Sutherland Brothers) |
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6. |
“I know your mind is made up/So put away your make-up” |
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Roxanne (by The Police) |
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7. |
“I don’t know why she’s leaving/I don’t know where she’ll go/I know she’s got her reasons/But I just don’t want to know” |
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Living next door to Alice (by Smokey) |
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8. |
“There’s a place for us, you know the movie song/When you gonna realise it was just that the time was wrong” |
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Romeo and Juliet (by Dire Straits) |
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ROUND 8 – “Manchester City” However this round has little or nothing to do with football |
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1. |
Which Manchester city centre pub shares its name with a Scottish ballad, and a paddle steamer that used to carry jute from Dundee? |
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The Lass O’Gowrie |
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2. |
There is a small basement bar called The Temple at the junction of Great Bridgewater Street and Oxford Street. Until the mid-1970s what had been the function of this building? |
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It was a public toilet |
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3. |
The Amaechi centre based in Whalley Range High School coaches young people in the skills of which sport? |
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Basketball |
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4. |
What sport is played by Didsbury-based Old Waconians? |
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Lacrosse |
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5. |
What building stood on the site that is now Piccadilly Gardens from 1754 until 1908 when a larger version was opened in Chorlton-on- Medlock? |
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Manchester Royal Infirmary |
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6. |
The foundation stone of Manchester’s Central Library was laid by which Prime Minister? |
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Ramsay McDonald |
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7. |
Which two closely associated heroes are commemorated separately by two blue plaques, one at 6 Kingswood Road, Ladybarn, and one at 6 Oswald Road, Chorlton-cum-Hardy? |
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The aviators Allcock and Brown |
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8. |
On which South Manchester landmark would you see the following inscription: ‘Erected in memory of Dr J Milson Rhodes JP CA, 1847-1909: “A friend to humanity"’? |
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The Didsbury Clocktower |
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SPARES |
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1. |
Which English poet and writer died 78 years ago today? |
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Thomas Hardy |
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2. |
What Hyde’s pub stands at 32 Victory Street, Rusholme? |
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The Osbourne House |
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3. |
What is the first name of Rumpole of the Bailey? |
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Horace |
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4. |
Who had a 1957 hit with The Cumberland Gap? |
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Lonnie Donnegan |
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5. |
Which fictional killer was an expert on Dante? |
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Hannibal Lecter |
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6. |
Banksey is a leading exponent of which controversial art form? |
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Urban Graffiti |
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7. |
Only once has a palindromic pop group taken a palindromic pop song into the top 10. Name the group and the song. |
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Abba with S.O.S. |