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What musical was produced on London stage 30 years after film?

Question
What musical was produced on London stage 30 years after film?
Answer
Singing in the Rain Tommy Steel 1983

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    What is hermeneutics ?

    What is hermeneutics ?

    A. A term that describes the absence of racial others in the canon
    B. A term that describes the attempt to read homosexuality into literature
    C. A term that describes the effect of autobiography on text
    D. A term that describes the interpretation of meaning

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    100 MCQs About Natural Disasters

    1. Which disaster are most likely to extinguish the human race? – Volcanoes and extraterrestrial impacts
    2. What’s the smallest asteroid or comet that could cause devastating effects for humanity? – 1 kilometer wide – the equivalent of about a 10-minute walk
    3. What is the biggest coronal mass ejections (CME) on record to hit Earth? – The arrington Event
    4. What is the chance that a Carrington-like storm will hit in the next ten years? – 12 %
    5. Which of these events may have been responsible for nearly wiping out the human race? – A supervolcano
    6. How far does a supervolcano’s incineration zone extend? – 100 Kilometers
    7. Where is the world’s biggest earthquake machine located? – Miki, Japan
    8. What, according to some scientists, is the ideal post apocalyptic food? – Mushrooms
    9. At No. 1 on the list, _____ are the most common natural disaster. – Floods
    10. Landslides, tsunamis and avalanches can all be caused by what other natural disaster? –Earthquakes
    11. Which volcanic feature is the deadliest? – The flow of ash, rock and gasses moving down a volcano’s side
    12. The deadliest natural disaster in U.S. history was a _____ that hit Galveston, TX in 1900, killing about 7,000 people. – Hurricane
    13. What makes a tornado dark colored? – The dirt and debris it sucks up
    14. One of America’s worst natural disasters occurred in 1980, when a _____ damaged much
    of the southern U.S. – Heat Wave
    15. Below average rainfall for a prolonged period of time is called – Drought
    16. What is a Tsunami? – A large wave usually formed by undersea earthquakes and landslides.
    17. A sudden movement in the earth’s crust caused by movements of tectonic plates is called? – An earthquake
    18. What is a natural disaster? – When a natural hazard impacts on the community causing destruction of property and loss of life.
    19. The phenomenon of unusually cool ocean currents off the coast of Australia is called – El Nino
    20. The social impacts of natural hazards include: – Loss of income to people or damage to an industry, illnesses cause by hazard, no form of communication
    21. Natural Hazards can be separated into _________ and ________ categories. – Economic Impacts and Environmental Impacts
    22. Indicates the severity of an earthquake in terms of the damage that it inflicts on structures and people – Intensity Scale
    23. Boundary where plates are moving towards each other – Convergent
    24. A fan shaped deposit of sand and gravel at the mouth of a mountain canyon where the stream gradient flattens at main valley floor – Alluvial Fan
    25. A ground depression caused by collapse into an underground cavern – Sinkhole
    26. Volcanic dome composed of rhyolite and rhyodacite – Rhyolite Dome
    27. Form as sediment is deposited in the slower waters on the inside of the meander bends – Point bar
    28. The number peaks per second – Frequency
    29. Record local and very strong earthquakes – Strong-motion Seismograph
    30. A measure of the total energy expended during an earthquake; depends on its seismic moment determined by: rock shear strength, area of rock, average slip distance offset across the – Moment Magnitude
    31. A landslide in which the mass rotates as it slides on a basal slip surface – Rotational Slide
    32. Blocky basalt lava with a ragged clinkery surface – Aa Flow
    33. Karst-like landscape in permafrost terrain caused by melting of thermofrost under increasing temperatures – Thermokarst
    34. Flat-topped volcano formed by an eruption under a glacier – Tuya
    35. Molten rock – Magma
    36. Record both local and distant earthquakes; but cannot accurately measure strong earthquakes in the direct vicinity – Broadband Seismograph
    37. A slurry of rock, sand, water flowing downslope; water usually makes up less than half of the flow volume –Debris Flow
    38. Ice that crystallizes in pores between grains of sediment – Interstitial Ice
    39. Developed 1953l based on maximum amplitude of earthquake waves recorded on a Wood Anderson Seismograph – Richter Magnitude Scale
    40. The total area inundated by the tsunami – Run-out distance
    41. The height to which a tsunami wave rushes up onshore – Run-up height
    42. Rigid outer rind of Earth approximately 60-100km thick – Lithosphere
    43. Maximum angle of which sediment particles can stand without falling (dependent on grain size, grain angularity, moisture content) – Critical Angle of Repose
    44. Heavier sediment in a stream that is moved along the stream bed rather than in suspension – Bedload
    45. Energy level between Richter Scale Units differs by ______ times – 31.5
    46. A flow of mud, rock, and water dominated by clay-sized particles – Mud Flow
    47. Rapid movement of land, ranging from cm/hr to m/s of material disappearing almost instantaneously – Collapse
    48. Relatively flat lowland that borders a river usually dry but subject to flooding – Floodplain
    49. Water saturated sediment jostled by an earthquake rearrange themselves into a closer packing arragement – Liquefaction
    50. Where the earthquake actually happens in the earth’s crust, where energy is radiating out from all directions – Focus
    51. A circular or oval feature resulting from the dissolution of rock – Doline
    52. Natural & Human Created Hazard like floods, droughts, wildland fires, weather phenomena, landslides are called – Hydrometeorological Hazards
    53. Type of collision forms continent volcanic arc of stratovolcanoes – Ocean-Continent
    54. Basalt lava with a ropy or smooth top – Pahoehoe Flow
    55. Magma that flows out onto the ground surface – Lava
    56. Fragmental material blown out of a volcano (ex. tephra, cinders, and bombs) – Pyroclastic
    57. A particle of volcanic ash between 2mm and 6mm across – Lapilli
    58. Type of collision that forms oceanic island arc of basaltic volcanoes – Ocean-Ocean

    59. Point where boundaries of 3 plates meet – Triple Junction
    60. Natural Hazards like Earthquakes, Tsunami, Volcanic Eruptions, Asteroid/Comet Impacts, Landslides are called – Geophysical Hazard
    61. Rapid discharge of water from an ice-dammed lake, typically resulting from a volcanic eruption – Jokulhlaup
    62. Tsunami that strikes area adjacent to its point of origin – Near Field Tsunami
    63. A broad expanse of basalt lava that cooled to fill in low-lying areas of the landscape – Flood Basalt
    64. An extremely large basalt-lava volcano, gently sloping sides – Shield Volcano
    65. Where the earthquake actually appears on the earth’s surface, sometimes there is a rupture at that point – Epicentre
    66. Downslope creep driven by sequential freezing and thawing – Gelifluction
    67. A huge collapse depression at the Earth’s surface that sank into a near-surface magma chamber during eruption of the magma – Resurgent Caldera
    68. The length of a fault broken during an earthquake – Surface Rupture Length
    69. Developed in 1902 by Giuseppe Mercalli – Mercalli Intensity Scale
    70. Measure earthquakes quantitatively, independent of location and assigns a magnitude value based on energy released – Magnitude Scale
    71. Involves the movement of a slab of rock, debris, or cohesive mud as a single unit – Slide
    72. The time between seismic waves – Period
    73. Extremely rapid downslope movement of large volumes of rock and debris – Sturzstrom
    74. Secondary/Shear waves that shake back and forth perpendicular to the direction of wave travel, cannot travel through a liquid (4.5km/s upper mantle, 3.5km/s crust) – S Wave
    75. Used to measure earthquakes – Seismograph
    76. The potential degree to which an individual or community could be affected by a natural hazard – Sensitivity
    77. Records distant earthquakes – Long-period Seismograph
    78. A river characterized by multiple, frequency shifting channels – Braided River
    79. An ice jam initiated by rpaid change in temperature – Thermal Ice Jam
    80. Extremely slow downslope flow of sediment on the surface – Creep
    81. Slope of the river channel; typically decreases downstream – Gradient
    82. A mudflow associated with volcanic action or involving volcanic materials – Lahar
    83. Component of stress perpendicular to the earth’s planar surface (force keeping the boulder/grain from moving) – Normal Stress
    84. A flow involving movement of broken rock, with little sand or mud, and particle-particle contact; usually developed in gravel or sand – Grain Flow
    85. A mass of cold, solid rock ejected from a volcano – Block
    86. Fine materials (dust, ash, and cinders) produced by volcanic action – Tephra
    87. An elevation that a stream cannot erode past, controlled by level of the body of water which the stream discharges into – Base Level
    88. A landslide that moves along a regular sloping planar surface – Translational Slide
    89. Mineral composed of potassium chloride, a salt used in manufacturing fertilizer – Sylvite
    90. Mineral or rock composed of sodium chloride; susceptible to dissolution – Halite
    91. An event involving a significant number of people and/or significant economic damage – Disaster
    92. The deepest parts of the channel along the length of the stream bed – Thalweg
    93. Lenses of pure ice developed in permafrost sediment – Segregated Ice
    94. An abnormally long wavelength wave produced by sudden displacement of water – Tsunami
    95. Topographic line or boundary separating watersheds – Drainage Divide
    96. Formed on the ceiling of a cavern when water percolates through fractures in limestone – Stalactite
    97. A large steep-sided volcano consisting of layers of ash, fragmental debris and lava – Stratovolcanoes
    98. The amount the fault or ridge moves away from its point of origin (aka displacement) – Offset
    99. A mass of liquid of partially solidified rock that is ejected from a volcano – Bomb
    100. Relatively slow movement of land, typically at rates of cm/yr – Subsidence