Saturday, April 30, 2016

Digest for rec.games.trivia@googlegroups.com - 14 updates in 5 topics

Joshua Kreitzer <gromit82@hotmail.com>: Apr 29 12:20PM

msb@vex.net (Mark Brader) wrote in
> after each of the following? For example, if we said Alabama, you
> would say Alaska.
 
> 1. Utah.
 
Vermont
 
> 2. Nebraska.
 
Nevada
 
> 3. Delaware.
 
Florida
 
> 4. Hawaii.
 
Idaho
 
> 5. New York.
 
North Carolina
 
> 6. South Dakota.
 
Tennessee
 
> 7. Ohio.
 
Oklahoma
 
> 8. Arkansas.
 
California
 
> 9. Virginia.
 
Washington
 
> 10. Iowa.
 
Kansas

> not.
 
> 1. Number of theses pinned to the door of All Saints' Church,
> Wittenberg, on 1517-10-31 by Martin Luther.
 
95

> 2. Number that features in the name of the war that ended in 1648
> with the Peace of Westphalia.
 
30
 
> 3. Number of presidential elections won by Franklin Delano
> Roosevelt.
 
4

> 4. Number of men who have walked on the Moon.
 
12

> 5. Number of wives (including ex-wives, if applicable) of Henry VIII
> who were still alive when he died in 1547.
 
2; 3
 
> 6. Number of points proposed by President Woodrow Wilson in his
> 1918-01-08 plan for world peace.
 
13

> 7. Number of Punic Wars between Rome and Carthage, 264-146 BC.
 
3
 
> 8. Number of Roman Emperors in 69 AD.
 
4

> 9. Number of states of the United States on 1900-01-01.
 
45

> 10. Number of provinces of Canada on 1900-01-01.
 
9; 8

--
Joshua Kreitzer
gromit82@hotmail.com
bbowler <bbowler@bigelow.org>: Apr 29 01:33PM

On Fri, 29 Apr 2016 03:59:07 -0500, Mark Brader wrote:
 
> each of the following? For example, if we said Alabama, you would say
> Alaska.
 
> 1. Utah.
 
Vermont
 
> 2. Nebraska.
 
Nevada
 
> 3. Delaware.
 
Florida
 
> 4. Hawaii.
 
Idaho
 
> 5. New York.
 
North Carolina
 
> 6. South Dakota.
 
Tennessee
 
> 7. Ohio.
 
Oklahoma
 
> 8. Arkansas.
 
California
 
> 9. Virginia.
 
Washington
 
> 10. Iowa.
 
Kansas
 
 
> All answers are numbers. Answers may repeat; then again, they may not.
 
> 1. Number of theses pinned to the door of All Saints' Church,
> Wittenberg, on 1517-10-31 by Martin Luther.
 
95
 
> 2. Number that features in the name of the war that ended in 1648
> with the Peace of Westphalia.
 
30
 
> 3. Number of presidential elections won by Franklin Delano
> Roosevelt.
 
4
 
> 4. Number of men who have walked on the Moon.
 
12
 
> 5. Number of wives (including ex-wives, if applicable) of Henry VIII
> who were still alive when he died in 1547.
 
2;0
 
> 6. Number of points proposed by President Woodrow Wilson in his
> 1918-01-08 plan for world peace.
 
14
 
> 7. Number of Punic Wars between Rome and Carthage, 264-146 BC.
 
3
 
> 8. Number of Roman Emperors in 69 AD.
 
3;1
 
> 9. Number of states of the United States on 1900-01-01.
 
45
 
> 10. Number of provinces of Canada on 1900-01-01.
 
14
tool@panix.com (Dan Blum): Apr 29 02:55PM


> * Game 9, Round 7 - Geography - Next State Alphabetically
 
> 1. Utah.
 
Vermont
 
> 2. Nebraska.
 
Nevada
 
> 3. Delaware.
 
Florida
 
> 4. Hawaii.
 
Idaho
 
> 5. New York.
 
North Carolina
 
> 6. South Dakota.
 
Tennessee
 
> 7. Ohio.
 
Oklahoma
 
> 8. Arkansas.
 
California
 
> 9. Virginia.
 
West Virginia
 
> 10. Iowa.
 
Kentucky
 
> * Game 9, Round 8 - History - By the Numbers
 
> 1. Number of theses pinned to the door of All Saints' Church,
> Wittenberg, on 1517-10-31 by Martin Luther.
 
95
 
> 2. Number that features in the name of the war that ended in 1648
> with the Peace of Westphalia.
 
30
 
> 3. Number of presidential elections won by Franklin Delano
> Roosevelt.
 
4
 
> 4. Number of men who have walked on the Moon.
 
12; 13
 
> 5. Number of wives (including ex-wives, if applicable) of Henry VIII
> who were still alive when he died in 1547.
 
3; 4
 
> 6. Number of points proposed by President Woodrow Wilson in his
> 1918-01-08 plan for world peace.
 
14
 
> 7. Number of Punic Wars between Rome and Carthage, 264-146 BC.
 
3
 
> 8. Number of Roman Emperors in 69 AD.
 
4
 
> 9. Number of states of the United States on 1900-01-01.
 
46; 47
 
> 10. Number of provinces of Canada on 1900-01-01.
 
9; 8
 
--
_______________________________________________________________________
Dan Blum tool@panix.com
"I wouldn't have believed it myself if I hadn't just made it up."
"Peter Smyth" <smythp@gmail.com>: Apr 29 05:38PM

Mark Brader wrote:
 
> after each of the following? For example, if we said Alabama, you
> would say Alaska.
 
> 1. Utah.
Vermont
> 2. Nebraska.
New Hampshire
> 3. Delaware.
Florida
> 4. Hawaii.
Idaho
> 5. New York.
North Carolina
> 6. South Dakota.
Tennessee
> 7. Ohio.
Oklahoma
> 8. Arkansas.
California
> 9. Virginia.
Washington
> 10. Iowa.
Kansas
> not.
 
> 1. Number of theses pinned to the door of All Saints' Church,
> Wittenberg, on 1517-10-31 by Martin Luther.
12
> 2. Number that features in the name of the war that ended in 1648
> with the Peace of Westphalia.
30
> 3. Number of presidential elections won by Franklin Delano
> Roosevelt.
4
> 4. Number of men who have walked on the Moon.
12
> 5. Number of wives (including ex-wives, if applicable) of Henry VIII
> who were still alive when he died in 1547.
2, 3
> 6. Number of points proposed by President Woodrow Wilson in his
> 1918-01-08 plan for world peace.
7
> 7. Number of Punic Wars between Rome and Carthage, 264-146 BC.
5
> 8. Number of Roman Emperors in 69 AD.
4
> 9. Number of states of the United States on 1900-01-01.
46, 45
> 10. Number of provinces of Canada on 1900-01-01.
7, 8
 
Peter Smyth
Erland Sommarskog <esquel@sommarskog.se>: Apr 29 09:25PM +0200

> after each of the following? For example, if we said Alabama, you
> would say Alaska.
 
> 1. Utah.
 
Vermont
 
> 2. Nebraska.
 
Nevada
 
> 3. Delaware.
 
Florida
 
> 4. Hawaii.
 
Idaho
 
> 5. New York.
 
North Dakota
 
> 6. South Dakota.
 
Tenneesee
 
> 7. Ohio.
 
Oklahoma
 
> 8. Arkansas.
 
California
 
> 9. Virginia.
 
Washington
 
> 10. Iowa.
 
Kansas
 
 
> All answers are numbers. Answers may repeat; then again, they may not.
 
> 1. Number of theses pinned to the door of All Saints' Church,
> Wittenberg, on 1517-10-31 by Martin Luther.
 
95

> 2. Number that features in the name of the war that ended in 1648
> with the Peace of Westphalia.
 
30

> 3. Number of presidential elections won by Franklin Delano
> Roosevelt.
 
4

> 4. Number of men who have walked on the Moon.
 
12

> 5. Number of wives (including ex-wives, if applicable) of Henry VIII
> who were still alive when he died in 1547.
 
1

> 6. Number of points proposed by President Woodrow Wilson in his
> 1918-01-08 plan for world peace.
 
12

> 7. Number of Punic Wars between Rome and Carthage, 264-146 BC.
 
3
 
> 8. Number of Roman Emperors in 69 AD.
 
4

> 9. Number of states of the United States on 1900-01-01.
 
46

> 10. Number of provinces of Canada on 1900-01-01.

9
 
 
 
--
Erland Sommarskog, Stockholm, esquel@sommarskog.se
Pete <pagrsg@wowway.com>: Apr 29 09:59PM

msb@vex.net (Mark Brader) wrote in news:tpKdnXyAN5jGv77KnZ2dnUU7-
> after each of the following? For example, if we said Alabama, you
> would say Alaska.
 
> 1. Utah.
 
Vermont
 
> 2. Nebraska.
 
Nevada
 
> 3. Delaware.
 
Florida
 
> 4. Hawaii.
 
Idaho
 
> 5. New York.
 
North Carolina
 
> 6. South Dakota.
 
Tennessee
 
> 7. Ohio.
 
Oklahoma
 
> 8. Arkansas.
 
California
 
> 9. Virginia.
 
Washington
 
> 10. Iowa.
 
Kansas
 
 
> * Game 9, Round 8 - History - By the Numbers
 
> All answers are numbers. Answers may repeat; then again, they may
not.
 
> 1. Number of theses pinned to the door of All Saints' Church,
> Wittenberg, on 1517-10-31 by Martin Luther.
 
95
 
 
> 2. Number that features in the name of the war that ended in 1648
> with the Peace of Westphalia.
 
100
 
 
> 3. Number of presidential elections won by Franklin Delano
> Roosevelt.
 
4
 
 
> 4. Number of men who have walked on the Moon.
 
12
 
 
> 5. Number of wives (including ex-wives, if applicable) of Henry VIII
> who were still alive when he died in 1547.
 
3; 2
 
 
> 6. Number of points proposed by President Woodrow Wilson in his
> 1918-01-08 plan for world peace.
 
14
 
 
> 7. Number of Punic Wars between Rome and Carthage, 264-146 BC.
 
3
 
 
> 8. Number of Roman Emperors in 69 AD.
 
3
 
 
> 9. Number of states of the United States on 1900-01-01.
 
46; 45
 
 
> 10. Number of provinces of Canada on 1900-01-01.
 
9; 8
 
 
Pete Gayde
Jason Kreitzer <jk71875@gmail.com>: Apr 29 05:32PM -0700

On Friday, April 29, 2016 at 4:59:07 AM UTC-4, Mark Brader wrote:
> after each of the following? For example, if we said Alabama, you
> would say Alaska.
 
> 1. Utah.
Vermont
> 2. Nebraska.
Nevada
> 3. Delaware.
Florida
> 4. Hawaii.
Idaho
> 5. New York.
North Carolina
> 6. South Dakota.
Tennessee
> 7. Ohio.
Oklahoma
> 8. Arkansas.
California
> 9. Virginia.
Washington
> 10. Iowa.
Kansas
 
> All answers are numbers. Answers may repeat; then again, they may not.
 
> 1. Number of theses pinned to the door of All Saints' Church,
> Wittenberg, on 1517-10-31 by Martin Luther.
57
> with the Peace of Westphalia.
 
> 3. Number of presidential elections won by Franklin Delano
> Roosevelt.
4
> 4. Number of men who have walked on the Moon.
5
> 5. Number of wives (including ex-wives, if applicable) of Henry VIII
> who were still alive when he died in 1547.
1
> 6. Number of points proposed by President Woodrow Wilson in his
> 1918-01-08 plan for world peace.
14
Dan Tilque <dtilque@frontier.com>: Apr 29 11:12PM -0700

Mark Brader wrote:
> after each of the following? For example, if we said Alabama, you
> would say Alaska.
 
> 1. Utah.
 
Vermont
 
> 2. Nebraska.
 
New Hampshire
 
> 3. Delaware.
 
Florida
 
> 4. Hawaii.
 
Idaho
 
> 5. New York.
 
North Carolina
 
> 6. South Dakota.
 
Tennessee
 
> 7. Ohio.
 
Oklahoma
 
> 8. Arkansas.
 
Connecticut
 
> 9. Virginia.
 
Washington
 
> 10. Iowa.
 
Kansas
 
 
> All answers are numbers. Answers may repeat; then again, they may not.
 
> 1. Number of theses pinned to the door of All Saints' Church,
> Wittenberg, on 1517-10-31 by Martin Luther.
 
93
 
 
> 2. Number that features in the name of the war that ended in 1648
> with the Peace of Westphalia.
 
30
 
 
> 3. Number of presidential elections won by Franklin Delano
> Roosevelt.
 
4
 
 
> 4. Number of men who have walked on the Moon.
 
12
 
 
> 5. Number of wives (including ex-wives, if applicable) of Henry VIII
> who were still alive when he died in 1547.
 
3
 
 
> 6. Number of points proposed by President Woodrow Wilson in his
> 1918-01-08 plan for world peace.
 
14
 
 
> 7. Number of Punic Wars between Rome and Carthage, 264-146 BC.
 
3
 
 
> 8. Number of Roman Emperors in 69 AD.
 
4
 
 
> 9. Number of states of the United States on 1900-01-01.
 
45
 
 
> 10. Number of provinces of Canada on 1900-01-01.
 
7
 
 
--
Dan Tilque
swp <Stephen.W.Perry@gmail.com>: Apr 29 08:03PM -0700

On Thursday, April 28, 2016 at 11:10:41 PM UTC-4, Dan Blum wrote:
> _______________________________________________________________________
> Dan Blum tool@panix.com
> "I wouldn't have believed it myself if I hadn't just made it up."
 
thank you.
 
I'll post something over the weekend.
 
swp
msb@vex.net (Mark Brader): Apr 19 11:24PM -0500

Mark Brader:
 
> 1. This American actor was born in 1959 and starred as Batman in
> "Batman Forever", as Jim Morrison in "The Doors", and as Doc
> Holliday in "Tombstone".
 
Val Kilmer. 4 for Peter, Marc, Stephen, Joshua, Jason, Björn,
Calvin, and Dan Blum.
 
> 2. This actor born in 1954 has starred in movies such as "Rush
> Hour", "Shanghai Knights", and "Around the World in 80 Days".
 
Jackie Chan. 4 for Marc, Stephen, Joshua, Jason, Björn, Calvin,
Pete, and Dan Blum.
 
> 3. This singer was born Brian Warner in 1969 and found commercial
> success in 1996 with the album "Antichrist Superstar" and the
> single "The Beautiful People".
 
Marilyn Manson. 4 for Peter, Stephen, Joshua, and Jason.
 
> 4. This singer was born Vincent Furnier in 1948 and released his
> first solo album "Welcome to My Nightmare" in 1975.
 
Alice Cooper. 4 for everyone -- Peter, Dan Tilque, Marc, Erland,
Stephen, Joshua, Jason, Björn, Calvin, Pete, and Dan Blum.
 
> 5. This Englishman who lived 1906-76 directed movies such as
> "The Third Man" and "Oliver!"
 
Sir Carol Reed. 4 for Stephen and Joshua.
 
> 6. This actor-director was born in 1956 and has directed movies
> such as "The Passion of the Christ" and "Apocalypto".
 
Mel Gibson. 4 for Peter, Marc, Stephen, Joshua, Jason, Björn,
Calvin, Pete, and Dan Blum.
 
> 7. This Canadian-American actor lived 1926-2010 and starred in
> movies such as "The Poseidon Adventure" and "Airplane!"
 
Leslie Nielsen. 4 for Peter, Dan Tilque, Marc, Stephen, Joshua,
Jason, Calvin, Pete, and Dan Blum.
 
> 8. This American musician played guitar in Fleetwood Mac, and
> wrote and performed "Holiday Road", the theme song to the movie
> "National Lampoon's Vacation".
 
Lindsey Buckingham. 4 for Peter, Marc, Stephen, Joshua, Jason,
Pete, and Dan Blum.
 
> 9. This American actor and comedian has done impressions of
> George Bush Sr. on "Saturday Night Live", and starred as Garth in
> "Wayne's World".
 
Dana Carvey. 4 for Peter, Dan Tilque, Marc, Stephen, Joshua, Jason,
Calvin, Pete, and Dan Blum.
 
> "Saturday Night Live" before he moved to "30 Rock", and last year
> was involved in a fatal motor vehicle incident. Fortunately,
> he survived.
 
Tracy Morgan. (Not Tracy Jordan -- that's his character on
"30 Rock".) 4 for Stephen, Joshua, Jason, and Pete.
 
 
> so formed.
 
> 1. Element #92, change the last 3 letters to US, make the name of
> a planet.
 
Uranium, Uranus. 4 for Peter, Dan Tilque, Marc, Erland, Stephen
(the hard way), Joshua, Jason, Björn, Calvin, Pete, and Dan Blum.
 
> 2. Element #22, change the last 2 letters to C, make the name of
> the 1997 movie that won the Best Picture Oscar.
 
Titanium, "Titanic". 4 for Peter, Dan Tilque, Marc, Erland, Stephen
(the hard way), Joshua, Jason, Björn, Pete, and Dan Blum.
 
> 3. Element #8, remove the last 4 letters, make the name of an
> animal.
 
Oxygen, ox. 4 for Peter, Dan Tilque, Marc, Erland, Stephen (the
hard way), Joshua, Calvin, and Dan Blum.
 
> 4. Element #88, change the last 3 letters to ON, make element
> number #86.
 
Radium, radon. 4 for Peter, Dan Tilque, Marc, Erland, Stephen
(the hard way), and Dan Blum.
 
This is exactly what happens when a radium atom undergoes radioactive
decay, emitting an alpha particle to drop two atomic numbers.
 
> 5. Squeezed in between those is element #87. Change the last 3
> letters to E, make the name of a country.
 
Francium, France. 4 for Peter, Dan Tilque, Marc, Erland, Stephen
(the hard way), Joshua, Calvin, Pete, and Dan Blum.
 
> 6. Element #5, change the last 2 letters to AT, make the name of
> a fictional journalist.
 
Boron, Borat. 4 for Peter, Dan Tilque, Marc, Erland, Stephen (the
hard way), Joshua, Calvin, and Dan Blum.
 
> 7. Element #67, change the last 3 letters to ES, make the last
> name of a fictional character whose name has been mentioned in
> this game already. (Hope you were listening.)
 
Holmium, Holmes (in the preamble to Round 2). 4 for Stephen (the
hard way).
 
> 8. Element #18, change the last letter to S, make the nickname of
> one of Toronto's professional sports teams.
 
Argon, Argos. 4 for Peter, Dan Tilque, Marc, Erland, Stephen (the
hard way), Calvin, Pete, and Dan Blum.
 
> 9. Element #33, change the last 2 letters to AL, make the name of
> a Premier League soccer team.
 
Arsenic, Arsenal. 4 for Peter, Dan Tilque, Erland, Stephen (the
hard way), Joshua, Björn, Calvin, Pete, and Dan Blum.
 
> 10. Element #79, change the last letter to F, make the name of a
> sport played by approximately 5,000,000 Canadians last year.
 
Gold, golf. 4 for Peter, Dan Tilque, Marc, Erland, Stephen (the
hard way), Joshua, Jason, Björn, Calvin, and Dan Blum.
 
 
Scores, if there are no errors:
 
GAME 8 ROUNDS-> 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 BEST
TOPICS-> Mis Art Spo Aud Geo Ent Sci FIVE
Stephen Perry 39 28 36 40 36 40 40 195
Joshua Kreitzer 26 10 28 24 40 40 28 162
Marc Dashevsky 16 0 22 20 40 28 32 142
Peter Smyth 16 0 28 4 28 28 36 136
"Calvin" 19 0 22 6 39 24 28 132
Pete Gayde 20 0 16 8 28 28 20 112
Dan Tilque 12 10 12 8 40 12 36 112
Erland Sommarskog 4 8 12 0 36 4 36 96
Jason Kreitzer 12 12 4 19 8 36 12 91
Björn Lundin 11 0 11 0 24 16 16 78
Dan Blum -- -- -- -- -- 28 36 64
 
--
Mark Brader, Toronto "Why do they do that?"
msb@vex.net "Because they can."
 
My text in this article is in the public domain.
msb@vex.net (Mark Brader): Apr 19 08:45PM -0500

You still have over 14 hours to enter RQ 217 as I repost this.
See the original posting for further details.
 
For questions #1-6, see:
 
http://www.eskimo.com/~scs/msb/rq217/handout.jpg
 
1. Give the manufacturer for 1 point and the model name for 3.
 
2. Name the character for 3 points, and the 2010 fantasy movie
that introduced her for 1.
 
3. Give its common name in English.
 
4. Who is this? 1 point each, up to a maximum of 3, for the first
and last names of the character and the actress; 1 point for
the title of the 1951 movie.
 
5. What is it?
 
6. What title has been blanked out?
 
7. Two words with the same etymology and very similar spellings.
One refers to an object many of which can be found in our solar
system, the other to a type of hypocycloid curve. Give either
word for 3 points, or both (in the order indicated) for 4.
Exact spelling required.
 
8. The later seasons of the TV series "Star Trek: Voyager" featured
a regular character who had been liberated from the Borg.
For 2 points, name the lab where this character often worked
-- one that was created especially to suit her expertise.
For 2 points more, give her name. (The short one-word name
her friends would use in conversation will do for 1 point;
for the full 2 points give either a longer form of this name
or else her original first and last name before she was a Borg.)
 
9. What invertebrate sea creature commonly has 5 arms? Give its
common name in English.
 
10. Complete this line from a 1952 musical-comedy movie:
 
"'People'? I ain't 'people'! I am a shimmering, glowing..."
 
(There are 10 more words, and you need to get most of them right
for the full 4 points, but the next word alone is worth 1 point.)
 
11. In 1999 in the US, President Clinton was impeached on (and
acquitted of) charges of perjury and obstruction of justice.
The independent counsel and special prosecutor whose
investigations led to the charges is now a president himself
-- president and chancellor of Baylor University. Who is he?
1 point for the first name, 3 for the surname.
 
12. The fictional newspaper the "Daily Planet", where Superman
worked in his secret identity as Clark Kent, was named after
what real-life newspaper? Give either its present name or its
name at the time. 1 point for the city, 3 points for the rest
of the name.
 
13. This movie was nominated for 5 Oscars, winning one for visual
effects, and counted among its executive producers an emeritus
Feynman Professor of Theoretical Physics at Caltech, whose
ideas were featured in the story. Name the movie for 3 points
and the professor for 1.
 
By now you should have noticed that this quiz has a theme.
For each of questions #13-16, give a single word that fits the
theme and names the thing described. In one case there are two
possible answers; for that question give either one for 3 points
or both for 4.
 
14. This is when people who want to promote something, such
as a commercial product or a political position, attempt to
simulate the appearance that it has widespread popular support.
For example, they might post messages on computerized media
using many different false identities.
 
15. The Jetsons' dog.
 
16. Catastrophe.
 
17. *
 
18. (Tiebreaker.) Explain in complete detail the etymology behind
answer #14.
 
--
Mark Brader | "Well, in difficult circumstances, sacrifices do
Toronto | have to be made -- especially by ordinary people."
msb@vex.net | --Sir Humphrey ("Yes, Prime Minister" (2013), Lynn & Jay)
 
My text in this article is in the public domain.
tool@panix.com (Dan Blum): Apr 29 02:51PM

> Peter Smyth 0 32 -- -- -- 32
> Erland Sommarskog 0 8 0 20 0 28
> Bj?rn Lundin 0 0 0 4 8 12
 
Did my post not show up elsewhere? I answered on Tuesday.
 
--
_______________________________________________________________________
Dan Blum tool@panix.com
"I wouldn't have believed it myself if I hadn't just made it up."
"Peter Smyth" <smythp@gmail.com>: Apr 29 05:54PM

Dan Blum wrote:
 
> > Erland Sommarskog 0 8 0 20 0 28
> > Bj?rn Lundin 0 0 0 4 8 12
 
> Did my post not show up elsewhere? I answered on Tuesday.
 
As did I.
 
Peter Smyth
msb@vex.net (Mark Brader): Apr 29 03:23PM -0500

Dan Blum:
>> Did my post not show up elsewhere? I answered on Tuesday.
 
Peter Smyth:
> As did I.
 
Must've been some sort of glitch. I see them now. I guess the easiest
way to report this is to repeat the results posting, with the applicable
corrections. So:
 
 
Mark Brader:
> Queen West and Shaw. Until its new permanent location opens
> in 2017, its collection is being displayed at pop-up locations.
> Name the museum.
 
MOCCA -- the Museum of Canadian Contemporary Art. As this is
an acronym, the exact spelling was required for full points.
4 for Stephen (the hard way). 3 for Joshua.
 
> "Voice of Fire" and Benjamin West's "Death of General Wolfe".
> In 1988 it moved from an office building on Elgin St. into a
> purpose-built building on Sussex Dr.
 
National Gallery. (In Ottawa, of course. I don't know why the
round's author thought it was acceptable to describe locations in
another city by street name alone, but they did.)
 
> Canada is this Canadian/Israeli architect. His first major
> work was an iconic residential project built as part of Expo 67.
> Name the architect.
 
Moshe Safdie. 4 for Stephen and Joshua.
 
> museum on Sherbrooke St. The museum was founded in 1860, and
> in 1972 it was the scene of the largest art theft in Canadian
> history. Name this museum.
 
Musée des beaux-arts de Montréal (Montreal Museum of Fine Arts --
yes, in Montreal). 4 for Stephen.
 
> 5. Designed by Raymond Moriyama, this Sudbury museum is built in
> the form of two snowflakes. It's the Northern Ontario
> counterpart to the Ontario Science Centre. Name the museum.
 
Science North. (In Sudbury.) 4 for Stephen.
 
> 6. Completed in 2007, this controversial addition to the Royal
> Ontario Museum extends out over Bloor St. What is the full
> name of this Daniel Liebeskind addition to the ROM?
 
Michael Lee-Chin Crystal.
 
> 7. Founded in 1886, this Victoria museum is known for its extensive
> anthropology collection devoted to Pacific Coast cultures.
> Name this museum, BC's answer to the ROM.
 
Royal British Columbia Museum. (What else?) 4 for Stephen.
 
> located at Wynford Drive and the DVP. Its extensive collection
> is dedicated to Islamic culture, and the museum features a
> restaurant under the direction of Mark McEwan. Name the museum.
 
Aga Khan Museum. 3 for Stephen.
 
> businessman Izzy Asper. Antoine Predock's design has visitors
> enter through the museum's roots, ascending through ramps and
> galleries, before reaching the Tower of Hope. Name the museum.
 
Canadian Museum of Human Rights. 3 for Stephen.
 
> Minute questions earlier in the season. Its vast paleontology
> collection is pretty much the only reason to visit Drumheller.
> Name the museum.
 
Royal Tyrrell Museum. 4 for Stephen.
 
 
> number of words following the lyric, which will form the *title
> of a Best Picture Oscar winner*. (They *may or may not* also be
> the title of the song.)
 
The original form of this round was the hardest in the rather easy
original game.
 
> Cause you're livin' alone
> [next 6 words -- remember, they are a movie title but maybe
> not the song title]
 
In the heat of the night. (The song is "Heat of the Night".)
4 for Stephen and Joshua.
 
> Now she and her man who called himself Dan
> Were in the next room at the hoe down
> [next word]
 
Rocky. ("Rocky Raccoon".) 4 for Dan Blum, Stephen, Erland, Pete,
Joshua, Jason, Marc, and Dan Tilque.
 
> Never free
> Never me
> [next word]
 
Unforgiven. ("The Unforgiven".) 4 for Stephen, Joshua, and Jason.
 
Apologies; in reconstructing the round as non-audio, I somehow
accidentally omitted a line. As Stephen noted, after "Never me"
it should have said "So I dub thee", *then* asked for the next word.
 
> I'm bare boned and crazy for you
> When you come
> [next word]
 
Crash. ("Crash into Me".) 4 for Stephen, Joshua, and Jason.
 
> Bring me my spear! O clouds, unfold!
> Bring me my
> [next 3 words]
 
Chariots of fire. ("Jerusalem".) Various entrants and most Internet
sources indicate that the correct lyric is "chariot of fire",
but the other phrase was the movie title, so I'm accepting either.
4 for Dan Blum, Stephen, Peter, Erland, Pete, and Joshua.
 
This error was made by the original author, but I should still
have noticed it when I searched for the lyrics to construct the
non-audio round. Apologies again.
 
> I can fly higher than an eagle
> 'Cause you are the wind beneath my
> [next word]
 
Wings. ("Wind Beneath My Wings".) 4 for Dan Blum, Stephen, Peter,
Erland, Pete, Joshua, Jason, Calvin, and Marc.
 
> As I throw each one of you a kiss
 
> This is my kind of town
> [next word]
 
Chicago. ("My Kind of Town".) 4 for Stephen, Pete, Joshua, Jason,
Calvin, Marc, and Dan Tilque.
 
> Und alles rief:
> Come and rock me
> [next word]
 
Amadeus. ("Rock Me Amadeus".) 4 for Björn, Dan Blum, Stephen,
Peter, Erland, Joshua, Jason, and Calvin.
 
> I smell the garden in your hair
 
> Take the train from
> [next word]
 
Casablanca. ("Marrakesh Express".) 4 for Dan Blum, Stephen, Erland,
Pete, Joshua, Jason, Calvin, and Marc.
 
> But I think we should take it slow
 
> We're just
> [next 2 words]
 
Ordinary people. ("Ordinary People".) 4 for Stephen and Joshua.
 
 
 
> 1. The artwork on the card "Orcish Settlers" is a parody of *which
> 1930 regionalist painting*? Unlike in the image, the original
> painting depicts a house that *isn't* on fire.
 
"American Gothic". 4 for Dan Blum, Stephen, Pete, Joshua, Calvin,
Marc, and Dan Tilque.
 
> *which children's story*? The fact that they all transform
> into werewolves may help indicate the fourth main character of
> the story.
 
"Little Red Riding Hood". 4 for Dan Blum, Stephen, Pete,
and Dan Tilque.
 
> American folklore? The name of this animal refers to its status
> as a hybrid that possesses the horns of an African ungulate
> and the body of a lagomorph.
 
Jackalope. 4 for Dan Blum, Stephen, Pete, and Dan Tilque.
 
> event where the witch Circe turns *which character's* men
> into pigs? This character's 10-year journey home to Ithaca
> from the Trojan War is the subject of a Greek epic.
 
Odysseus (Ulysses). 4 for Björn, Dan Blum, Stephen, Joshua, Calvin,
Marc, and Dan Tilque. 3 for Pete.
 
> but it depicts *which man*, the first real-life person to appear
> on a card? He won a Nobel Prize in 1921 for his discovery of
> the photoelectric effect.
 
Albert Einstein. 4 for Dan Blum, Stephen, Joshua, Calvin,
and Dan Tilque.
 
> 6. This shows a "Magic"al depiction of a kami, a deity worshipped
> in *which religion*?
 
Shinto (Kami No Michi). 4 for Dan Blum, Stephen, Pete, Joshua,
Marc, and Dan Tilque.
 
> just like *which queen* for whom it is named? This person
> wove stories within stories for her husband King Shahryar,
> and delayed her execution for 1,001 nights.
 
Scheherazade (Shahrazad). 4 for Björn, Dan Blum, Stephen, Pete,
Joshua, and Marc.
 
> 8. This card, "Borrowing 100,000 Arrows", depicts an event in
> "Romance of the Three Kingdoms", one of *which country's*
> four classical novels?
 
China. 4 for Dan Blum, Stephen, Joshua, and Dan Tilque.
 
> 9. This shows three cards that depict sites in the real world.
> Name the present-day country where *any one* of them is located.
 
Germany (Black Forest), Japan (Mt. Fuji), UK (Scottish Highlands).
4 for Dan Blum, Stephen, Peter, Pete, Joshua, Calvin, Marc,
and Dan Tilque.
 
> 10. This shows a humorous take on "Magic: The Gathering cards".
> Name *all three words* that have been censored in the names of
> these cards.
 
Rock, Paper, Scissors. 4 for Dan Blum, Stephen, Peter, Pete,
and Dan Tilque.
 
> 11. And image #11, you ask? Why, he's just along for the ride!
> Identify the card if you like for fun, but for no points.
 
Shuriken. Stephen got this.
 
 
Scores, if there are now no errors:
 
GAME 9 ROUNDS-> 2 3 4 5 6 BEST
TOPICS-> Spo Sci Can Aud Mis THREE
Stephen Perry 32 0 30 40 40 112
Joshua Kreitzer 36 20 7 40 28 104
Dan Tilque 32 24 0 8 36 92
Marc Dashevsky 32 40 0 16 20 92
Pete Gayde 36 21 0 20 31 88
Dan Blum 16 20 0 20 40 80
"Calvin" 20 36 0 16 16 72
Jason Kreitzer 20 8 0 28 0 56
Peter Smyth 0 32 0 12 8 52
Erland Sommarskog 0 8 0 20 0 28
Björn Lundin 0 0 0 4 8 12
 
--
Mark Brader | "It is impractical for the standard to attempt to
Toronto | constrain the behavior of code that does not obey
msb@vex.net | the constraints of the standard." -- Doug Gwyn
 
My text in this article is in the public domain.
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