Detailed Instructions: In this task, you are given a context, a subject, a relation, and many options. Based on the context, from the options select the object entity that has the given relation with the subject. Answer with text (not indexes).
Q: Context: The 1972 Winter Olympics, officially known as the (French: Les "XIes Jeux olympiques d'hiver"), were a winter multi-sport event which was held from February 3 to February 13, 1972, in Sapporo, Hokkaid, Japan. It was the first Winter Olympics to be held outside Europe and North America, and only the third game (summer or winter) held outside those regions over all, after Melbourne (1956 Summer Olympics) and Tokyo (1964 Summer Olympics)., Career.
Shinoda attended Waseda University, where he studied theater and also participated in the Hakone Ekiden long distance race. He joined the Shchiku Studio in 1953 as an assistant director, where he worked on films by such directors as Yasujir Ozu. He debuted as a director in 1960 with "One-Way Ticket for Love", which he also scripted. His focus on youth and the cultural and political turmoil of 1960s Japan made him a central figure in the Shchiku New Wave alongside Nagisa shima and Yoshishige Yoshida. He worked in a variety of genres, from the yakuza film ("Pale Flower") to the samurai film ("Assassination"), but he particularly became known for his focus on socially marginal characters and for an interest in traditional Japanese theater, which found its greatest expression in "Double Suicide", in which actors are manipulated like Bunraku puppets. He also was interested in sports, directing a documentary on the 1972 Winter Olympics. Also known for his collaborations with such artists as Shji Terayama and Tru Takemitsu, Shinoda left Shchiku in 1965 to form his own production company, Hygensha., Assassination (  Ansatsu ) , also known as The Assassin , is a 1964 film directed by Masahiro Shinoda ., , also known as Kij Yoshida, is a Japanese film director and screenwriter., , also known as "Ningy jruri", is a form of traditional Japanese puppet theatre, founded in Osaka in the beginning of 17th century. Three kinds of performers take part in a bunraku performance: the "Ningytsukai" or "Ningyzukai" (puppeteers), the "Tay" (chanters) and "shamisen" musicians. Occasionally other instruments such as taiko drums will be used., , abbreviated as , is a large, private university with a main campus located in Shinjuku, Tokyo, Japan. First established in 1882 as the Tky Senmon Gakk or Tky College by kuma Shigenobu, the school was formally renamed as Waseda University in 1902. The university consists of 13 undergraduate schools and 23 graduate schools. Waseda is one of the select group of universities assigned additional funding under the Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology's "Global 30" Project., Biography.
Terayama was born December 10, 1935, in Hirosaki, Aomori, the only son of Hachiro and Hatsu Terayama. His father died at the end of Pacific War in Indonesia in September 1945. When Terayama was nine, his mother moved to Kysh to work at an American military base, while he himself went to live with relatives in the city of Misawa, also in Aomori. Terayama lived through the Aomori air raids that killed more than 30,000 people., Subject: assassination , Relation: original_language_of_work, Options: (A) french (B) indonesia (C) japanese
A:
japanese