Fox Ciel saw a large field while she was on a bus. The field was a n×m rectangle divided into 1×1 cells. Some cells were wasteland, and other each cell contained crop plants: either carrots or kiwis or grapes.
After seeing the field carefully, Ciel found that the crop plants of each cell were planted in following procedure:
The following figure will show you the example of this procedure. Here, a white square represents a cultivated cell, and a black square represents a waste cell.
Now she is wondering how to determine the crop plants in some certain cells.
In the first line there are four positive integers n,m,k,t (1≤n≤4·104,1≤m≤4·104,1≤k≤103,1≤t≤103), each of which represents the height of the field, the width of the field, the number of waste cells and the number of queries that ask the kind of crop plants in a certain cell.
Following each k lines contains two integers a,b (1≤a≤n,1≤b≤m), which denotes a cell (a,b) is waste. It is guaranteed that the same cell will not appear twice in this section.
Following each t lines contains two integers i,j (1≤i≤n,1≤j≤m), which is a query that asks you the kind of crop plants of a cell (i,j).
For each query, if the cell is waste, print Waste. Otherwise, print the name of crop plants in the cell: either Carrots or Kiwis or Grapes.
4 5 5 6
4 3
1 3
3 3
2 5
3 2
1 3
1 4
2 3
2 4
1 1
1 1
Waste
Grapes
Carrots
Kiwis
Carrots
Carrots
The sample corresponds to the figure in the statement.