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W.D. Gaster, or simply Gaster, is a character from the 2015 video game Undertale who was the previous "royal scientist" for the game's underground kingdom of monsters before he fell into the Core, an invention by Gaster. He cannot normally be encountered in the game, and is never discussed directly as part of the game's main narrative.
Caroline Jones was born in New York City to Sonia and Paul Tudor Jones, and raised in Greenwich, Connecticut. [4] [5] She attended the Professional Children's School in New York City and later New York University where she studied creative writing. [5] [1] She took singing lessons when she was nine, and wrote her first song when she was ten. [6]
The fight's theme music, "Megalovania", became a widely known Internet meme. In the Papyrus Ending, Papyrus becomes leader of the Underground, with Sans working extensively behind the scenes to keep the Underground stable; Papyrus reveals he is nervous about the job, as he is unaware or in denial that the player killed the other main characters.
Gaster may refer to: Stomach (Greek: Gaster) Gaster (insect anatomy) a trade name of famotidine, an inhibitor of stomach acid production; W. D. Gaster, a character from the video game Undertale. Gaster (surname) Gaster, a character in the television series PaRappa the Rapper; Gaster (district), a constituency in St. Gallen, Switzerland
As one of their most famous songs, "Sullivan" is a Caroline's Spine concert staple. The song also earned the band a gig on the USS Enterprise in 1998. [4]On November 16, 2008, the Sullivan Brothers Iowa Veterans Museum opened to the public in Waterloo, Iowa, and at the event, Jimmy Newquist performed an acoustic rendition of the song.
Quincy Jones and singer John Legend attend a celebration of Carole King and her music to benefit Paul Newman's The Painted Turtle Camp at the Dolby Theatre on Dec. 4, 2012, in Hollywood, California.
"Caroline" is a song from American alternative rock band Concrete Blonde, which was released in 1990 as the third single from their third studio album Bloodletting. The song was written by Johnette Napolitano, and produced by Concrete Blonde and Chris Tsangarides. The song reached number 23 on the US Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart. [1]
It is possible that Barrow coached Jones on what to say if he was ever arrested, [67] or that the two of them agreed on a basic theme for Jones's official story: that Clyde, Bonnie and Buck had done all the shooting and robbing and that W.D., a minor child, was an unwilling member of the gang, forced to ride with them at gunpoint, unconscious ...