P: After a tough road loss, the Steelers returned home.  With their record at 6-5, they faced off against the 6-5 Colts in a rematch of 2014's 51-34 blowout win.  Adam Vinatieri was able to get the Colts an early 3-0 lead when he kicked a 35-yard field goal.  The Steelers would get on the board when Chris Boswell kicked a 29-yard field goal for a 3-3 tie and then move into the lead when he kicked a 51-yard field goal for a 6-3 lead.  The Colts retook the lead in the 2nd quarter when Matt Hasselbeck found Frank Gore on a 9-yard pass for a 10-6 game.  Though the Steelers responded with 2 straight touchdowns of their own:  Ben Roethlisberger found Antonio Brown on a 7-yard pass (with a successful 2-point conversion) retaking the lead 14-10 followed by Roethlisberger finding Markus Wheaten on a 5-yard pass to move ahead 21-10 at halftime.  In the second half, it was all Steelers when Roethlisberger found Martavis Bryant on a 68-yard pass for a 28-10 game and only score of the third quarter.  In the fourth quarter, Roethlisberger and Brown hooked up again this time on a 5-yard pass for a 35-10 game.  Boswell then put a 42-yard field goal through for a 38-10 game.  Finally, the Steelers wrapped the scoring up when Brown returned a punt 71 yards for a touchdown making the final score 45-10. The defense had yet another stellar outing by forcing 3 turnovers and getting 5 sacks (2 on Hasselbeck, 3 on Whitehurst)
Answer this: Which player had the shortest field goal?

A: Chris Boswell


P: Cities or regions with significant Laotian-American populations include the Seattle metropolitan area (enumerating 12,190; 0.4% of its population); San Francisco Bay Area (11,545; 0.2%); Dallas–Fort Worth metropolitan area (10,500; 0.2%); Sacramento metropolitan area (9,814; 0.4%); Minneapolis – Saint Paul area (8,676; 0.3%); San Diego metropolitan area (8,079; 0.3%); Fresno metropolitan area (7,967; 0.9%); Greater Los Angeles Area (7,120; 0.04%); Nashville metropolitan area (6,210; 0.4%); Portland metropolitan area (5,806; 0.3%); Chicago metropolitan area (4,762; 0.05%); San Joaquin County, California (4,266; 0.6%); Providence, Rhode Island (3,456; 0.2%); Denver metropolitan area (2,673), Des Moines, Iowa (2,270), Anchorage metropolitan area (1,997; 0.5%), and Fort Smith, Arkansas-Arkoma, Oklahoma (1,730).
Answer this: How many more Laotian-Americans were in the Seattle metropolitan area compared to those in Providence, Rhode Island and the Anchorage metropolitan area combined?

A: 6737


P: Upon his appointment as Bishop of Wrocław in 1198, Jarosław of Opole, elder son of the Silesian duke Bolesław I the Tall, received the territories around the town of Nysa  from his father. After Jarosław's death in 1201, his half-brother Duke Henry I the Bearded of Silesia decided to leave Nysa, as well as the castellany of Otmuchów, under the control of the Diocese of Wrocław, while the rest of the late Jarosław's Upper Silesian lands were annexed by his uncle Mieszko IV Tanglefoot in the following year. In 1290 Henry IV Probus, duke of Lower Silesia at Wrocław, gave the bishops privileges of autonomy on their lands in Nysa, creating the legal basis for the Duchy of Nysa. Henry of Wierzbna, Bishop of Wrocław from 1302 to 1319, was the first to actually use the title of a Duke of Nysa. The duchy in its original form only lasted until 1335, when Silesia passed to the Kingdom of Bohemia by the Treaty of Trentschin. In 1342 Bishop Przecław of Pogorzeli swore the oath of fealty to King John the Blind and afterwards played a vital role in the negotiations for the 1348 Treaty of Namslau between John's successor Charles IV and King Casimir III the Great of Poland. Pogorzeli also significantly enlarged his territory by acquisition of Grodków  from Duke Bolesław III the Generous of Brzeg in 1344. For the next two hundred years, the Polish, Czech and German inhabitants of Nysa-Grodków lived in relative harmony, even during the beginnings of the Reformation as the control of the region switched between Protestant and Catholic rulers. This ended with the Thirty Years' War.
Answer this: How many years did the Duchy of Nysa last in its original form?

A:
45