| Question 1: ________'s short story "Jupiter V" contains elements in common with 2001 and mentions Toynbee several times. | |||
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| Question 2: They are generally about the size of an American ________, but sometimes considerably larger. | |||
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| Question 3: [3] The first known reference to the tiles in the media came in 1994 in ________. | |||
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| Question 4: Another explanation may be that the tiles quote a short play by ________, 4 A.M., written in 1983 and published in the collection Goldberg Street: Short Plays and Monologues in 1985. | |||
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| Question 5: Municipal officials in ________, the city with the most tiles, have no comment on the tiles. | |||
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| Question 6: A tile that used to be located in Santiago de Chile mentions a street address in Philadelphia, ________: 2624 S. | |||
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| Question 7: Thus the message might be that humanity ought to strive to colonize ________—as in Kubrick's work—or something greater, to survive. | |||
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| Question 8: In June 2007, a tile was found on the city square in ________. | |||
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| Question 9: "Toynbee" refers to ________, a famous historian. | |||
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| Question 10: Presumed copycat tiles have been spotted in suburban Indiana, in ________, and on the West Coast, including San Francisco, California and Roswell, New Mexico[7]. | |||
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