1. During the French Revolution, she toured the country collecting the heads of guillotined aristocrats and making plaster casts known as "death masks" out of them. Today, she is internationally renowned for this art. Who?
2. Since this device was often used by dissidents and revolutionaries, intelligence agencies such as the KGB regulated them strictly. Files were maintained on every single make and model, and their owners, in order to facilitate forensic examination. Manufacturers of this device included Olivetti, Smith Corona and Underwood. In April 2011, the last production plant in the world for this, located in Mumbai and owned by Godrej and Boyce, closed down. What?
3. The first of its kind was a picture of the Burning Man, the logo of an annual week-long event celebrating expression held in the Black Rock Desert, Nevada. It was intended to inform people that the employees were away attending this festival and that normal services would soon be resumed. What did this grow into?
4. Which band, originally known as Sweet Children, gets its present name from a slang term for "a day spent smoking marijuana"?
5. Many American universities have a practice involving the publication of a printed or online directory of the names, photographs and certain bio-data of students, faculty and staff at the beginning of every academic year, in order to help them get to know each other. What is this directory known as?