Michigan State University/University of Delaware High ...



Michigan State University/University of Delaware High School Tournament:

Round 5 Tossups:

1. Abscisic acid triggers an influx of this element in stomatal guard cells, and this element’s oxalate and carbonate can form raphides in plants. Parathyroid hormone increases serum concentrations of this element, and the sarcoplasmic reticulum stores and(*) pumps this element in muscle cells. In neurons, activation of voltage-dependent channels for this element stimulates neurotransmitter release. Vitamin D aids intestinal absorption of this element, the deficiency of which is a major cause of osteoporosis. For 10 points, identify this most common mineral in the human body, a major component of bones.

ANSWER: Calcium

2. In this show, one character steals the God-monarch’s phoenix, Philomeena. A recurring character on this show is Zecora, and its characters fight Discord, voiced by John de Lancie, in The Return of Harmony. Its protagonist goes insane due to her fear of Princess Celestia in(*) Lesson Zero. Applejack returned home following the production of a Sonic Rainboom by Rainbow Dash on this show, which was created by Lauren Faust. For 10 points, name this TV show, about the adventures of Twilight Sparkle and her five equine friends.

ANSWER: My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic [accept My Little Pony Generation 4 or equivalents, prompt on “MLP,” prompt on “Friendship is Magic,” prompt on “MLP-FIM”]

3. One character in this work supports smoking because “a man should always have an occupation of some kind.” Two characters in this work debate about the properness of eating muffins in their situation, and another resists her schooling because she wants to water her flowers. That character,(*) Cecily, dislikes her uncle’s seriousness. At the end of this play, Miss Prism reveals that two characters are in fact brothers. Jack Worthing and Algernon Moncrieff take on a shared pseudonym in, for 10 points, what Oscar Wilde play?

ANSWER: The Importance of Being Earnest, or a Trivial Comedy for Serious People

4. This opera’s song “It Takes a Long Pull to Get There” is similar to the Jewish folk tune Havenu Shalom Aleichem. A buzzard flies over the central location of this opera shortly before one character offers another “happy dust.” The libretto to this work was created by(*) DuBose Heyward, and it includes songs such as “It Ain't Necessarily So,” sung by Sportin’ Life. Set on Catfish Row, one of its title characters attempts to rescue the other from Crown, a dock worker. For 10 points, name this opera that includes “Summertime” and focuses on African-Americans, by George Gershwin.

ANSWER: Porgy and Bess

5. This man commissioned Salvius Julianus to write his edictum perpetuum, which simplified provincial law codes. This emperor’s rebuilding of Jerusalem in a Hellenic mold and ban on circumcision led to the outbreak of the(*) Bar Kokhba revolt in Judea, which took four years to quell. This emperor returned the Mesopotamian conquests of his predecessor, Trajan, to Parthia. For 10 points, name this Roman emperor, succeeded by Antoninus Pius, who built a namesake wall across Britain to keep out barbarian tribes.

ANSWER: Publius Aelius Traianus Hadrianus Augustus

6. In the coda of this piece’s first movement, the strings play a tremolo chromatic fourth from a D to an A. The third movement theme and variations of this symphony contains a chromatic fourth horn solo, while the second movement is a(*) scherzo with a D major trombone trio. The fourth movement, which opens with quotations from the previous three, is an expression of “universal brotherhood” that describes a “Daughter of Elysium.” Including a vocal setting of Friedrich Schiller’s Ode to Joy, for 10 points, identify this final symphony by Ludwig van Beethoven.

ANSWER: Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 [or Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony, or Choral Symphony, or Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 after end, or Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony after end, or Choral Symphony after end, prompt on partial answer before end]

7. This figure beat the sons of King Eurytus in an archery contest for the hand of his daughter Iole, and, upon being refused marriage, he killed the king and most of his sons. This man accidentally killed his tutor(*) Linus with a lyre, and, after shooting and killing the Eagle that tortured Prometheus, he freed him from his chains. He stole the flesh-eating horses of a Thracian King, the Mares of Diomedes, and diverted a river in order to wash the Augean Stables in one day. For 10 points, name this extremely strong hero who killed the Hydra as part of his 12 labors.

ANSWER Heracles [or Hercules]

8. This work’s title character recalls watching 44 sunsets on the same day and meets a red-faced man who counts how many stars he owns. That character later meets a geographer, who criticizes his flower, and the narrator’s drawing of a boa constrictor eating an(*) elephant is mistaken for a hat. This work’s narrator encounters the title character when he is asked to draw a sheep. Baobabs infest the title character’s home planet of B-612. For 10 points, name this work where the title character meets the narrator in the Sahara Desert, written by Antoine de Saint-Exupery.

ANSWER: The Little Prince [or Le Petit Prince]

9. This man’s concern only for the people and not animals in a stable fire illustrates his ethics, and his views on education focused on the “six arts.” This philosopher emphasized the mastery of self-restraint and propriety by developing(*) li, and his emphasis on reciprocity was the origin of the Silver Rule. Mencius expanded on the ideas of this thinker, who considered filial piety a basic form of ren. This man advocated the Mandate of Heaven, and his sayings are compiled in the Analects. For 10 points, identify this ancient philosopher, the namesake of a Chinese religion.

ANSWER: Confucius [or Kong Fuzi]

10. This compound converts oleic acid into azelaic acid, and its attacks on double bonds in polymers leads to namesake “cracking” of materials like rubber. This compound is produced in the Chapman cycle, and its concentrations are measured in Dobson units. The Greek origin of its name reflects the fact that it is produced in(*) lightning storms. Chlorofluorocarbons have caused atmospheric levels of this compound to drop, creating a hole over the Antarctic. For 10 points, name this triatomic oxygen compound that forms a layer which absorbs ultraviolet radiation.

ANSWER: Ozone [or O3 before “oxygen”]

11. This ruler reformed the government of Livonia due to its financial woes, and he also repressed the Streltsy. This ruler changed New Year’s Day from September 1st, and he cheated on his wife Eudoxia with Anna Mons. This ruler put a naval base at Taganrog to help him capture(*) Azov. This czar’s reforms included changes in court etiquette and a tax on beards, which he saw as antiquated. This czar defeated Charles XII at Poltava, allowing his country to gain large tracts of land from Sweden. For 10 points, identify this Czar that westernized Russia and founded a new capital at St. Petersburg.

ANSWER: Peter I [or Peter the Great, prompt on “Peter”]

12. Professor Willard gives a speech on geology in one scene in this work, while in another a doctor and a paperboy, Joe Crowell, discuss a schoolteacher’s marriage. A performance of “Blessed Be the Tie That Binds” is directed by the alcoholic(*) Simon Stimson, who attempts to dissuade a woman who died in childbirth from revisiting her twelfth birthday. Following a confession of mutual attraction in Mr. Morgan’s drugstore, that woman, Emily Webb, marries George Gibbs. For 10 points, identify this Thornton Wilder play set in Grover's Corners, New Hampshire.

ANSWER: Our Town

13. The Pratt and Airy models describe the gravitational equilibrium of these objects, called isostasy, while Vacquier noticed magnetic striping in them. They are found above the asthenosphere, and their movement is controlled by factors including basal drag and(*) slab suction. Two of these objects grind alongside one another at transform boundaries, which include the San Andreas Fault. A subduction zone is often created where an oceanic one meets a continental one. The Nazca and Juan de Fuca are examples of, for 10 points, what large slabs of rock that make up the Earth’s crust?

ANSWER: tectonic plates

14. In one of this man’s works a dove tells Salvatore, the Burgomaster of Riva, of the arrival of the title character. This author of The Hunter Gracchus wrote about Frieda’s fiancee’s attempts to meet with the owners of the title structure in one work, and about the arrest of(*) Joseph K in another. In his most famous work, Greta seeks to attend a conservatory and play violin. For 10 points, name this author of The Castle and The Trial, as well as a work in which Gregor Samsa is transformed into a giant insect, The Metamorphosis.

ANSWER: Franz Kafka

15. In one of this man’s works, a chest of gold and pearl necklaces lies open on a table while a woman holds the title object. This creator of Woman With a Balance depicted a woman leaning her elbow on a table in A Girl Asleep, and a man(*) bends over to touch a globe in his The Astronomer. This artist may have used a camera obscura to produce a painting that depicts the Rotterdam Gate, and his most famous work depicts a woman in a blue and yellow headdress as well as the title object. For 10 points, identify this Dutch artist of View of Delft and Girl with a Pearl Earring.

ANSWER: Johannes Vermeer

16. One event in this conflict was the genocide of supposed subverters in the Bodo League Massacre. Many civilians were killed at No Gun Ri during this conflict, and Matthew Ridgway took command after another general was relieved for suggesting that the US(*) invade China. This war saw UN troops cross the Pusan Perimeter and land on Green Beach during the assault on Inchon, and the DMZ was established at the 38th parallel after this war. For 10 points, name this war fought on a namesake peninsula, where UN forces were commanded by Douglas MacArthur.

ANSWER: Korean War

17. Hirschi’s social bond and self-control theories of this phenomenon oppose strain theorists like Robert Merton. Cesare Beccaria’s book on it opposed torture, and, according to Stephen Levitt, the legalization of abortion resulted in declines in it. People who repeat this kind of behavior are called(*) recidivists. International varieties of it include one kind “against peace” and another “against humanity.” Imprisonment and fines are some governmental responses to, for 10 points, what type of behavior which includes misdemeanors and felonies and involves breaking laws?

ANSWER: crime [or obvious equivalents such as criminal behavior or criminal activity, prompt on “deviance”]

18. This state contains Mount Columbia and Mount Oxford in its Collegiate Peaks. This state’s capital city was built on Sloan’s Lake and lies near the confluence of Cherry Creek and the South Platte River.(*) Cripple Creek is in this state, which also contains Great Sand Dunes National Park. The Spruce Tree House and the Cliff Palace are in this state’s Mesa Verde National Park. For 10 points, name this state that contains Mount Elbert, Pike’s Peak, and the Air Force Academy and has cities such as Aspen, Boulder, and Denver.

ANSWER: Colorado

19. This empire’s Köprülü era occurred when royal advisers from the namesake family dominated the government, and its Tulip period included renovations of its ruler’s residence at the Topkapi Palace. This empire won the Battle of(*) Mohács [mow-HOCH], and Bursa was once its capital. In the Auspicious Incident, it disbanded its Janissary [JAN-is-sare-y] forces, and it controlled the entire Balkans under Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent. For 10 points, identify this empire of Asia Minor that ruled from its capital at Istanbul.

ANSWER: Ottoman Empire [accept Osmalani Belyk, Osmalani Empire, or Osmalani Devleti, prompt on “Turkish” or “Turkey”]

20. In these devices, Q-switching increases the power level of its output, and they work only after undergoing population inversion. This device, based on a similar one for microwaves developed by Charles Hard Townes, was first constructed using an artificial ruby by(*) Theodore Maiman. These devices are also used in Raman spectroscopy because of the inelastic scattering of this device’s emissions and in a namesake cooling process. For 10 points, name this device that emits a beam of coherent light through radiation.

ANSWER: Lasers [or Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation]

21 (Tiebreaker). This man’s rise to power began when he allied with his father’s blood brother, Toghrul, in a campaign, and this man created a civil code called the Yassa. This ruler conquered the Naimans, Merkits, and Uyghurs [WEE – gurs] in addition to the Khwarezmid [kwar-EZZ-mid] Empire. Some geneticists have hypothesized that as many as(*) 1 in 200 people are descended from this man, and he used mounted archers and faked retreats to fool foes into traps. For 10 points, name this unifier of the Mongol Tribes whose grandson Kublai ruled the largest contiguous empire in history.

ANSWER: Genghis Khan [or Temujin]

Round 5 Bonuses:

1. Massachusetts is the site of a Senatorial election in November 2012. For 10 points each:

[10] This incumbent Republican senator defeated Martha Coakley in a 2010 special election, breaking the Democrats’ supermajority in the Senate.

ANSWER: Scott Philip Brown

[10] The special election that Brown won was held to fill the seat of this Democrat, who died of brain cancer after serving as a senator for 46 years.

ANSWER: Edward Kennedy [or Ted Kennedy, prompt on “Kennedy”]

[10] This Democrat, a former Harvard Law professor who helped design the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, is running against Brown in the 2012 election.

ANSWER: Elizabeth Warren

2. In this work, King Richard I is aided by Locksley and the Friar, who steal from the rich and give to the poor. For 10 points each:

[10] Identify this novel, in which the title son of Cedric the Saxon defends Rebecca from the Knight Templar de Bois-Guilbert and marries his father’s ward, Lady Rowena.

ANSWER: Ivanhoe

[10] Ivanhoe was written by this Scottish author, who also wrote about the title highlander’s thwarting of Rasheligh Hildebrand’s attempt to kill his cousin Frank in Rob Roy.

ANSWER: Sir Walter Scott

[10] In this Scott novel, Lucy Ashton’s engagement to Edgar Ravenswood is interrupted when her mother forces her to marry the Laird of Bucklaw, whom she stabs on her wedding night.

ANSWER: The Bride of Lammermoor

3. Answer some questions about Chinese dynasties, for 10 points each:

[10] This dynasty, whose long reign was broken up by Wang Mang’s rebellion, eventually dissolved into the Three Kingdoms. It lent its name to the most common ethnicity in China. ANSWER: Han Dynasty

[10] This dynasty was set up by Mongol invaders and proclaimed by Kublai Khan. Marco Polo visited China during its rule.

ANSWER: Yuan Dynasty

[10] Emperor Hongwu established this dynasty that ruled from the Forbidden City and supported the voyages of Zheng He.

ANSWER: Ming Dynasty [or Empire of the Great Ming]

4. It opens with a list of people who taught the author important lessons, and notes that “very little is needed to make a happy life” and “The things we want in life are empty.” For 10 points each:

[10] Name this guide for self-improvement which the author “addressed to himself,” a work of ancient philosophy largely written on a military campaign.

ANSWER: Meditations [or “Ta eis heauton”]

[10] Meditations was a work by this Roman philosopher who succeeded Antoninus Pius as the last of the Five Good Emperors.

ANSWER: Marcus Aurelius Antoninus Augustus

[10] Marcus Aurelius belonged to this school of philosophy founded by Zeno of Citium. It focused on using reason to overcome destructive emotions.

ANSWER: Stoicism [or word forms such as “stoics”]

5. The Ulam spiral depicts patterns in the distribution of these numbers, and the sieve of Eratosthenes finds all of these numbers below a given value. For 10 points each:

[10] Name this class of integers whose members are divisible only by one and themselves.

ANSWER: prime numbers

[10] Cantor used his diagonal argument to prove the uncountability of the set of these numbers, which cannot be represented as a ratio of integers.

ANSWER: irrational numbers

[10] Liouville’s [Lee-YOU-ville’s] constant was the first number shown to belong to this class of numbers, which are not roots of any polynomial with rational coefficients.

ANSWER: transcendental numbers

6. Ernest Medina was acquitted for his participation in this event. For 10 points each:

[10] Name this event, where American soldiers killed almost 500 villagers. Hugh Thompson won the Distinguished Flying Cross for trying to intervene in this incident.

ANSWER: My Lai massacre

[10] This second lieutenant was the only person convicted in relation to the massacre, although he claimed to be following orders from Captain Medina.

ANSWER: William Laws Calley

[10] The My Lai massacre occurred during this conflict, in which the US sent troops to its namesake country to try to stop Ho Chi Minh from gaining power.

ANSWER: Vietnam War [or Second Indochina War, or War Against the Americans to Save the Nation, prompt on “Indochina War”]

7. Some of the symbolic portions of this meal include a lamb’s bone and bitter herbs. For 10 points each:

[10] Name this meal, eaten at Passover, that commemorates the Jews’ struggle for freedom from Egypt.

ANSWER: Seder

[10] This unleavened bread constitutes an important portion of a Seder. A piece of this bread called the afikomen is broken off and then hidden and looked for by children.

ANSWER: matzo [or matzah]

[10] At one point during the Seder, this prophet, who heralded the Messiah and denounced the worship of Baal, is supposed to enter the house and drink a cup of wine.

ANSWER: Elijah

8. In one stage of the aerobic form of this process, nicotidamine adenine dinucleotide is produced in the mitochondrial matrix and used as an electron carrier. For 10 points each:

[10] Name this oxidative process, the net chemical opposite of photosynthesis.

ANSWER: Cellular respiration

[10] In this stage of aerobic respiration, negatively charged particles cascade across a series of cytochrome proteins, creating a charge gradient and allowing oxidative phosphorylation to occur.

ANSWER: Electron transport chain [or ETC]

[10] Around 32 of these molecules are made during oxidative phosphorylation by its namesake synthase. This molecule stores and transports energy for many cellular processes.

ANSWER: ATP [or Adenosine triphosphate, or Adenosine 5’-triphosphate]

9. In one work by this author, the Westernized schoolteacher Lakunle woos Sidi, who instead marries the chieftain of Ilujinle, Baroka. For 10 points each:

[10] Name this author of The Lion and the Jewel who described the prevention of Elesin’s ritual suicide by colonial authorities in his play Death and the King’s Horseman.

ANSWER: Wole Soyinka

[10] Soyinka comes from this African nation, also the home of Ben Okri, who wrote about the child spirit Azaro in The Famished Road.

ANSWER: Federal Republic of Nigeria

[10] This Nigerian author chronicled the life and death of the Igbo man Okonkwo as he faces the intrusion of British missionaries and colonists in Things Fall Apart.

ANSWER: Chinua Achebe [or Albert Chinualumogu Achebe]

10. Answer some questions about locations in Greco-Roman mythology, for 10 points each:

[10] Bellerophon once tried to ride Pegasus to the top of this Mountain, the home of the gods, but was struck down by Zeus’ lightning bolts before he got there.

ANSWER: Mt. Olympus

[10] This mountain, towering over the nearby Oracle of Delphi, was where Deucalion ends up after a great flood and was home to the Muses.

ANSWER: Mount Parnassus

[10] This location was founded when Cadmus followed a special cow to its future location, and sacrificed it to Athena before beginning to build this city with the help of the Spartoi.

ANSWER: Thebes

11. Particle colliders are used to probe the innards of subatomic particles. For 10 points each:

[10] This CERN particle accelerator, the largest in the world, began collisions in 2009 despite a 2008 explosion that forced it to run at a lower energy than the 14 TeV initially planned.

ANSWER: Large Hadron Collider [or LHC]

[10] This collaboration, along with CMS one of the general-purpose physics detectors at the LHC,  announced on July 4, 2012 the discovery of the Higgs Boson.

ANSWER: ATLAS [or A Toroidal LHC Apparatus, or A Toroidal Large Hadron Collider Apparatus]

[10] This type of particle accelerator uses an oscillating voltage and strong magnetic fields to propel particles in a spiral direction. The have a resonant frequency of “b times q over two pi m”.

ANSWER: cyclotron [or synchrocyclotron]

12. This work’s title character meets her future husband when he has a horseback-riding accident. For 10 points each:

[10] Name this work in which the title character is raised at Gateshead by Mrs. Reed before marrying Edward Rochester.

ANSWER: Jane Eyre

[10] While attending the Lowood School, Jane Eyre befriends this girl, who later dies during a tuberculosis outbreak caused by the poor conditions at the school.

ANSWER: Helen Burns [accept either underlined portion]

[10] This author of Jane Eyre also described Lucy Snowe’s relationship with M. Paul Emanuel in Villette.

ANSWER: Charlotte Brontë [prompt on “Bronte”, prompt on “Currer Bell”]

13. Due to his Nazi sympathies, this man was sent to the Bahamas during World War II, where he acted as governor. For 10 points each:

[10] Identify this British Monarch who abdicated his throne after less than a year’s reign in 1936.

ANSWER: Edward VIII [or Edward Windsor, prompt on “the Duke of Windsor”, prompt on “Edward”]

[10] Edward gave up the throne because he wished to marry this woman, who would have been unacceptable as queen because she was twice divorced.

ANSWER: Wallis Warfield Simpson [or Duchess of Windsor]

[10] This brother of Edward VIII succeeded him. He helped keep morale high in World War II despite his notable stammer, and he fathered Elizabeth II.

ANSWER: George VI [prompt on “George”]

14. Markovnikov’s Rule describes the outcome of the addition of a protic acid to one of these compounds. For 10 points each:

[10] Name this class of hydrocarbons with a carbon-carbon double bond and general formula CnH2n [C N H 2 N].

ANSWER: alkenes

[10] Alkenes can be turned to alkanes via this reductive process, which is catalyzed in benzene by Raney nickel.

ANSWER: hydrogenation

[10] Carbon-carbon bonds are this type of bond, typically formed between elements with similar electronegativity, wherein electrons are shared between atoms.

ANSWER: covalent bond

15. The background of this work depicts a tree obscured by a pillar, as well as a woman rummaging through a trunk. For 10 points each:

[10] Identify this painting that depicts a goddess lying completely nude upon white sheets on a red mattress.

ANSWER: Venus of Urbino

[10] This painting by the artist of Venus of Urbino depicts a cherub reaching into a sarcophagus and flanked by the two title figures, one clothed, the other nude.

ANSWER: Sacred and Profane Love [or Venus and the Bride]

[10] This court painter of Charles V and creator of Bacchus and Ariadne painted Venus of Urbino and Sacred and Profane Love.

ANSWER: Titian [or Tiziano Vecellio]

16. This novel is largely set aboard the Pequod. For 10 points each:

[10] Name this novel by Herman Melville which chronicles Captain Ahab’s quest for revenge against the title character, to whom he lost his leg.

ANSWER: Moby-Dick; or, The Whale

[10] This narrator of Moby-Dick is the only survivor of the wreck of the Pequod.

ANSWER: Ishmael

[10] This First Officer of the Pequod opposes Ahab’s quest for the whale, and makes a failed attempt to get the crew to force Ahab to turn back.

ANSWER: Starbuck

17. One provision of this diplomatic effort was to halt the construction of ABM defenses. For 10 points each:

[10] Identify these U.S.-Soviet discussions that would have prohibited ballistic missile launches and restricted the participants’ ability to build nuclear arms.

ANSWER: SALT I [“Salt One”, or Strategic Arms Limitations Talks I, prompt on “SALT”, prompt on “Strategic Arms Limitations Talks”, do not accept or prompt on “SALT II”]

[10] SALT I was signed by this U.S. president, a supporter of detente who pardoned his predecessor, Richard Nixon.

ANSWER: Gerald Rudolph “Jerry” Ford [or Leslie Lynch King]

[10] Negotiations for SALT were conducted in this city, site of a “Declaration” advocating non-intervention in other nations and condemning Soviet annexation of the Baltic States.

ANSWER: Helsinki

18. This city lies on the Spree River, and is home to the Fernsehturm [“fern”-”set”-urm], a massive television tower. For 10 points each:

[10] Name this city which was once divided in half by a massive wall and is the capital of Germany.

ANSWER: Berlin

[10] Berlin is surrounded by this German State. The Oder River forms its eastern border, and its capital is at Potsdam.

ANSWER: Brandenburg

[10] This river makes up Brandenburg’s western border. It rises in the Krkonose [ker-KO-no-shay] Mountains of the Czech Republic and runs through Hamburg on its way to the sea.

ANSWER: Elbe River

19. It includes the vocal numbers “Over hill, over dale” and “The Removal of the Spells,” while its “Wedding March” refers to the marriage of Duke Theseus and Hippolyta. For 10 points each:

[10] Identify this incidental music to a Shakespearean play. It uses a descending two-note motif to mimic Bottom’s braying.

ANSWER: A Midsummer Night’s Dream [or “Ein Sommernachtstraum”]

[10] A Midsummer Night’s Dream was written by this German Romantic composer who composed the Hebrides Overture and Scottish Symphony, as well as Songs Without Words.

ANSWER: Jakob Ludwig Felix Mendelssohn-Bartholdy

[10] Mendelssohn’s Reformation symphony uses one of this type of piece called “A Mighty Fortress is Our God.” Julia Ward Howe wrote a “Battle” one of these “of the Republic.”

ANSWER: Hymns

20. The final story arc of this anime sees the Seireitei assaulted by the Vandenreich, while in another it is assaulted by the Bounts. For 10 points each:

[10] Name this anime by Tite Kubo that sees Ichigo Kurosaki become a Shinigami and fight against soul devouring creatures named Hollows.

ANSWER: Bleach [or Burichi]

[10] This anime follows Goku and his friends and family in adventures fighting foes including Freeza, Cell, and Boo.

ANSWER: Dragon Ball Z [or Dragon Ball Kai, or Dragon Ball GT, or DBZ, or Doragon Buru]

[10] This anime by Hiro Mashima follows the adventures of the title magic guild members such as Natsu Dragneel, Gray Fullbuster, Erza Scarlet, Wendy Marvell, Happy, and Carla.

ANSWER: Fairy Tail [or Feari Teiru]

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