Monday, July 11, 2016

Digest for rec.games.trivia@googlegroups.com - 10 updates in 4 topics

Calvin <334152@gmail.com>: Jul 10 04:46PM -0700

On Saturday, July 9, 2016 at 1:17:34 PM UTC+10, Dan Blum wrote:
 
> 2. France Telecom entirely renamed itself to <answer 2> in 2013, after
> buying the company owning the name in 2000 and gradually rebranding
> its services. (This is a one-part answer.)
 
O2
 
> 3. This character in Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream is
> sometimes taken as a self-insertion of sorts, as he is the author of
> the play-within-a-play that is performed at the end.
 
Oberon
 
> she was just 20 years old; it got her a Grammy (her only one) and is
> her highest-charting single. However, she has continued to publish,
> with her latest album having been released in 2012.
 
Alanis Morissette
 
> term. He and one of his brothers established a research institute
> bearing the family name which later merged with a college founded by
> another wealthy businessman to form a major university.
 
Andrew Carnegie
 
> Electric bought them in the early 1990s but could not make a success
> out of them. A new company with the same name was formed in 2008 but
> dissolved in 2012. (This is a one-part answer.)
 
Amstrad
 
> his performances for directors such as Billy Wilder and Blake
> Edwards. He won an Oscar for Best Actor for Save the Tiger and Best
> Supporting Actor for Mister Roberts.
 
Jack Lemmon
 
> those for Thief, Sorceror, Legend, Firestarter, and Risky
> Business. They more recently did the soundtrack for the game Grand
> Theft Auto V.
 
Autobahn
 
> appearing in other series and in one theatrical movie (to
> date). <Answer 9> has not had that kind of success but has made some
> additional appearances over the years.
 
Merry Melodies
 
> years. In 1984 it was sold to Sara Lee who in turned sold it to
> S. C. Johnson (also an American company) in 2011. (This is a one-part
> answer.)
 
Kiwi
 
cheers,
calvin
Dan Tilque <dtilque@frontier.com>: Jul 11 12:31AM -0700

Dan Blum wrote:
> that he coached the Boston Bruins for five seasons and the Colorado
> Rockies for one, and before coaching he played in the AHL for many
> years (and in the NHL for one game).
 
Cherry
 
 
> 2. France Telecom entirely renamed itself to <answer 2> in 2013, after
> buying the company owning the name in 2000 and gradually rebranding
> its services. (This is a one-part answer.)
 
Orange
 
> term. He and one of his brothers established a research institute
> bearing the family name which later merged with a college founded by
> another wealthy businessman to form a major university.
 
Melon
 
> Electric bought them in the early 1990s but could not make a success
> out of them. A new company with the same name was formed in 2008 but
> dissolved in 2012. (This is a one-part answer.)
 
Apricot
 
> appearing in other series and in one theatrical movie (to
> date). <Answer 9> has not had that kind of success but has made some
> additional appearances over the years.
 
Banana Splits
 
> years. In 1984 it was sold to Sara Lee who in turned sold it to
> S. C. Johnson (also an American company) in 2011. (This is a one-part
> answer.)
 
Kiwi
 
 
 
--
Dan Tilque
msb@vex.net (Mark Brader): Jul 10 04:34PM -0500

These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2016-06-05,
and should be interpreted accordingly.
 
On each question you may give up to two answers, but if you give
both a right answer and a wrong answer, there is a small penalty.
Please post all your answers to the newsgroup in a single followup,
based only on your own knowledge. (In your answer posting, quote
the questions and place your answer below each one.) I will reveal
the correct answers in about 3 days.
 
All questions were written by members of the Usual Suspects and
are used here by permission, but have been reformatted and may
have been retyped and/or edited by me. For further information
see my 2016-05-31 companion posting on "Questions from the Canadian
Inquisition (QFTCI*)".
 
 
I wrote one of these rounds.
 
 
* Game 3, Round 4 - Science - Airplane Recognition
 
This is a bonus round.
 
Please see the handout
 
http://www.eskimo.com/~scs/msb/3-4/air.pdf
 
which shows 3 pages of airplanes. On each question we will name
two airplanes with similar characteristics, and both of them will
be on the same page of the handout.
 
In this medium, I'll adjust the round to work as follows. On every
answer you should give *two* photo numbers, starting with the one
you are more confident of, *and say* which of the two planes you
think is which, preferably in this style:
 
#34 (Chrysler), #38 (Studebaker)
 
Unlike the usual QFTCI rule, you'll only get *one try* to give
the two numbers.
 
* If you get everything correct, you get 6 points.
 
* If you get both picture numbers right, but interchange which
plane is which, that's 4 points.
 
* If only one picture number that you give is right, you get
2, 3, or 4 points depending, in the obvious way, on whether it
was the first or second one and whether or not you correctly
said which plane it is.
 
1. For the first few questions we'll give you the page number;
after that you're on your own. So please start with page 3,
and pick out the Boeing 707 and the Douglas DC-8.
 
2. On page 1, pick out the Boeing 747 and the Airbus A380.
 
3. On page 2, find the Lockheed Constellation and the Douglas DC-7.
 
4. Back to page 1; find the Hawker-Siddeley Trident (or HS-121)
and the Boeing 727.
 
5. Look at page 3, and pick out the Gulfstream G400 and the
Learjet 35.
 
6. On page 2, find the Boeing 247 and the Douglas DC-3.
 
7. We've now eliminated 10 pictures, so from here on you have to
find the right page yourself; but in every case both planes
will still be on the same page. So find the correct page with
two De Havilland Comet models, and pick out the Comet 1 and
the Comet 4.
 
8. Now find the Lockheed L-1011, also called the TriStar, and the
Douglas DC-10, on the same page as each other.
 
9. Find the Bombardier CRJ (which was previously called the Canadair
CRJ), and, on the same page, the Embraer ERJ-145.
 
10. Pick out the Airbus A320 and, on the same page, the Boeing 737.
 
 
So there were 7 decoys, listed here in alphabetical order.
If you like, decode the rot13 to see what they are and identify
the pictures for fun, but for no points.
 
11. Nveohf N-guerr-sbegl.
12. Pncryvf KP-gjryir (n erny cynar gung arire ragrerq freivpr).
13. Pbapbeqr.
14. Sbeq Gevzbgbe.
15. Ybpxurrq Ryrpgen.
16. Ervaqrre (n svpgvbany cynar).
17. Ghcbyri Gh-bar-sbegl-sbhe.
 
 
* Game 3, Round 6 - Science - Tea
 
This round pertains to tea in both its true and herbal varieties.
 
1. Tea is usually classified according to the level of a certain
aspect of the processing that the tea leaves have undergone.
The level of what?
 
2. Please decode the rot13 only after you are finished with
question #1. Oynpx grn unf orra pbzcyrgryl bkvqvmrq; terra grn
naq fbzr bguref haqretb yvggyr be ab bkvqngvba. Va orgjrra gurz
vf *juvpu pynff bs grn* jvgu na vagrezrqvngr yriry bs bkvqngvba?
 
3. The grade of a particular batch of tea leaves refers to its
quality and condition. What is the two-word industry term for
the highest grade, an expression also used in North America to
refer generically to black tea?
 
4. The teabag was invented in the early 1900s, but did not become
an important part of industrial tea production until the 1950s.
In 1996, what innovation on the teabag concept was introduced
by Lipton and PG Tips, in order to improve brewing efficiency?
The Tetley company disputed the claim of superiority, but in
2014 the British Advertising Standards Agency rejected thair
complaint. Name the innovation.
 
5. Which British author wrote a 1946 essay titled "A Nice Cup of
Tea" that presented eleven rules for tea-making that he
considered "golden"? Among them was that the tea must be poured
first, not the milk. Name the author.
 
6. Oil of bergamot -- which, by the way, is a type of orange -- is
the distinctive ingredient of what variety of tea? Apparently it
will still be drunk in the 24th century -- hot.
 
7. What synonym for "herbal tea" comes from a Greek word referring
to a drink made from pearl barley? The same word is used in
French and Italian.
 
8. Which popular herbal tea, scientific name "Aspalathus linearis",
is native to South Africa, and grown particularly in the Western
Cape there?
 
9. Which fruit of a common flower is often mixed with hibiscus to
make a herbal tea?
 
10. Traditionally this tea has been drunk to induce abortions and
to stimulate menstrual flow, despite -- or perhaps because
of -- its known toxicity. Kurt Cobain wrote a song about it,
saying that it would "distill the life that's inside of me".
Fittingly, the song with the same name as the tea appeared on
Nirvana's album "In Utero". Name it.
 
--
Mark Brader | "Sir, your composure baffles me. A single counterexample
Toronto | refutes a conjecture as effectively as ten... Hands up!
msb@vex.net | You have to surrender." -- Imre Lakatos
 
My text in this article is in the public domain.
Erland Sommarskog <esquel@sommarskog.se>: Jul 11 12:22AM +0200

> 6. Oil of bergamot -- which, by the way, is a type of orange -- is
> the distinctive ingredient of what variety of tea? Apparently it
> will still be drunk in the 24th century -- hot.

Earl Grey
 
 
--
Erland Sommarskog, Stockholm, esquel@sommarskog.se
swp <Stephen.W.Perry@gmail.com>: Jul 10 04:42PM -0700

On Sunday, July 10, 2016 at 5:34:50 PM UTC-4, Mark Brader wrote:
> These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2016-06-05,
> and should be interpreted accordingly.
 
strange things are afoot at the circle-k
 
> I wrote one of these rounds.
 
airplanes?
 
 
> 1. For the first few questions we'll give you the page number;
> after that you're on your own. So please start with page 3,
> and pick out the Boeing 707 and the Douglas DC-8.
 
#19 (707) and #23 (dc-8)
 
> 2. On page 1, pick out the Boeing 747 and the Airbus A380.
 
#9 (747) and # #2 (a380)
 
> 3. On page 2, find the Lockheed Constellation and the Douglas DC-7.
 
#16 (constellation) and #10 (dc-7)
 
> 4. Back to page 1; find the Hawker-Siddeley Trident (or HS-121)
> and the Boeing 727.
 
#6 (hs-121) and #5 (727)
 
> 5. Look at page 3, and pick out the Gulfstream G400 and the
> Learjet 35.
 
#26 (g400) and #25 (learjet 35)
 
> 6. On page 2, find the Boeing 247 and the Douglas DC-3.
 
#11 (247) and #18 (dc-3)
 
> will still be on the same page. So find the correct page with
> two De Havilland Comet models, and pick out the Comet 1 and
> the Comet 4.
 
#22 (comet 1) and #24 (comet 4)
 
> 8. Now find the Lockheed L-1011, also called the TriStar, and the
> Douglas DC-10, on the same page as each other.
 
#8 (l-1011) and #1 (dc-10)
 
> 9. Find the Bombardier CRJ (which was previously called the Canadair
> CRJ), and, on the same page, the Embraer ERJ-145.
 
#17 (bombardier crj) and #13 (embraer erj-145)
 
> 10. Pick out the Airbus A320 and, on the same page, the Boeing 737.
 
#21 (a320) and #27 (737)
 
 
> 1. Tea is usually classified according to the level of a certain
> aspect of the processing that the tea leaves have undergone.
> The level of what?
 
oxidation
 
> question #1. Black tea has been completely oxidized; green tea
> and some others undergo little or no oxidation. In between them
> is *which class of tea* with an intermediate level of oxidation?
 
oolong
 
> quality and condition. What is the two-word industry term for
> the highest grade, an expression also used in North America to
> refer generically to black tea?
 
orange pekoe
 
> The Tetley company disputed the claim of superiority, but in
> 2014 the British Advertising Standards Agency rejected thair
> complaint. Name the innovation.
 
tetrahedron-shaped tea bags (thair? is that because of the previous round?)
 
> Tea" that presented eleven rules for tea-making that he
> considered "golden"? Among them was that the tea must be poured
> first, not the milk. Name the author.
 
george orwell
 
> 6. Oil of bergamot -- which, by the way, is a type of orange -- is
> the distinctive ingredient of what variety of tea? Apparently it
> will still be drunk in the 24th century -- hot.
 
earl grey (thanks for the star trek reference)
 
> 7. What synonym for "herbal tea" comes from a Greek word referring
> to a drink made from pearl barley? The same word is used in
> French and Italian.
 
tisane?
 
> 8. Which popular herbal tea, scientific name "Aspalathus linearis",
> is native to South Africa, and grown particularly in the Western
> Cape there?
 
red rooibos?
 
> 9. Which fruit of a common flower is often mixed with hibiscus to
> make a herbal tea?
 
roselle?
 
> saying that it would "distill the life that's inside of me".
> Fittingly, the song with the same name as the tea appeared on
> Nirvana's album "In Utero". Name it.
 
pennyroyal tea
 
 
swp
tool@panix.com (Dan Blum): Jul 11 04:08AM


> 1. For the first few questions we'll give you the page number;
> after that you're on your own. So please start with page 3,
> and pick out the Boeing 707 and the Douglas DC-8.
 
#24 (Boeing), #22 (Douglas)
 
> 2. On page 1, pick out the Boeing 747 and the Airbus A380.
 
#9 (Boeing), #2 (Airbus)
 
> 3. On page 2, find the Lockheed Constellation and the Douglas DC-7.
 
#16 (Lockheed), #10 (Douglas)
 
> 4. Back to page 1; find the Hawker-Siddeley Trident (or HS-121)
> and the Boeing 727.
 
#6 (Trident), #8 (Boeing)
 
> 5. Look at page 3, and pick out the Gulfstream G400 and the
> Learjet 35.
 
#25 (Gulfstream), #26 (Learjet)
 
> 6. On page 2, find the Boeing 247 and the Douglas DC-3.
 
#18 (Boeing), #11 (Douglas)
 
> will still be on the same page. So find the correct page with
> two De Havilland Comet models, and pick out the Comet 1 and
> the Comet 4.
 
#15 (Comet 4), #12 (Comet 1)
 
> 8. Now find the Lockheed L-1011, also called the TriStar, and the
> Douglas DC-10, on the same page as each other.
 
#23 (Douglas), #19 (Lockheed)
 
> 9. Find the Bombardier CRJ (which was previously called the Canadair
> CRJ), and, on the same page, the Embraer ERJ-145.
 
#13 (Bombardier), #17 (Embraer)
 
> 10. Pick out the Airbus A320 and, on the same page, the Boeing 737.
 
#27 (Boeing), #21 (Airbus)
 
 
> 1. Tea is usually classified according to the level of a certain
> aspect of the processing that the tea leaves have undergone.
> The level of what?
 
drying; fermenting
 
> question #1. Oynpx grn unf orra pbzcyrgryl bkvqvmrq; terra grn
> naq fbzr bguref haqretb yvggyr be ab bkvqngvba. Va orgjrra gurz
> vf *juvpu pynff bs grn* jvgu na vagrezrqvngr yriry bs bkvqngvba?
 
white tea
 
> Tea" that presented eleven rules for tea-making that he
> considered "golden"? Among them was that the tea must be poured
> first, not the milk. Name the author.
 
HG Wells; George Orwell
 
> 6. Oil of bergamot -- which, by the way, is a type of orange -- is
> the distinctive ingredient of what variety of tea? Apparently it
> will still be drunk in the 24th century -- hot.
 
Earl Gray
 
> 7. What synonym for "herbal tea" comes from a Greek word referring
> to a drink made from pearl barley? The same word is used in
> French and Italian.
 
tisane
 
> 8. Which popular herbal tea, scientific name "Aspalathus linearis",
> is native to South Africa, and grown particularly in the Western
> Cape there?
 
rooibos
 
> 9. Which fruit of a common flower is often mixed with hibiscus to
> make a herbal tea?
 
rose hips
 
--
_______________________________________________________________________
Dan Blum tool@panix.com
"I wouldn't have believed it myself if I hadn't just made it up."
msb@vex.net (Mark Brader): Jul 10 04:15PM -0500

Mark Brader:
> These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2016-06-05,
> and should be interpreted accordingly... I will reveal the correct
> answers in about 3 days.
 
Sorry about the delay there.

> For further information see my 2016-05-31 companion posting on
> "Questions from the Canadian Inquisition (QFTCI*)".
 
 
> I did not write either of these rounds.
 
But I did suggest the format for the second one.
 
 
> eight directors who have won it twice. Name any one of them.
> Hint: Two are Belgian and the others -- in no particular order --
> are British, American, Serbian, Austrian, Danish, and Japanese.
 
Bille August, Francis Ford Coppola, Luc and Jean-Pierre Dardenne,
Michael Haneke, Shohei Imamura, Emir Kusturica, Ken Loach.
 
> was 1955, and the winner that year also won the Best Picture
> Oscar. Name that movie, starring Ernest Borgnine and written
> by Paddy Chayefsky.
 
"Marty". 4 for Marc and Pete.
 
> One is about George W. Bush and the war on terror; the
> other followed Jacques Cousteau and the crew of the Calypso.
> Name either.
 
"Fahrenheit 9/11", "The Silent World" ("Le Monde du Silence").
4 for Erland, Dan Blum, Marc, Peter, Björn, and Pete.
 
> -- except once. Within 1 year, name the year when it was
> cancelled in solidarity with the civil unrest, student protests,
> and general strikes that were taking place across most of France.
 
1968 (accepting 1967-69). 4 for Erland, Dan Blum, Marc, and Björn.
 
> Recall his Past Lives", hail from? Recent films that *took
> place* in this country include "The Impossible", "The Hangover
> Part II", "Rambo", and "Only God Forgives".
 
Thailand. 3 for Pete.
 
> Sweet Hereafter" and this year for "It's Only the End of the
> World" ("Juste la fin du monde"). Name either of the directors
> of these films.
 
Atom Egoyan, Xavier Dolan. 4 for Erland and Marc.
 
> country had 3 Oscar nominations; *that* film's title is "The
> Battle of..." -- this country's capital city. Now, name the
> African country.
 
Algeria ("The Battle of Algiers"). 4 for Dan Blum.
 
> earlier Grand Prix du Festival. Within 2, and including
> <answer 2>, how many of the 69 were also at least nominated
> for the Oscar for Best Picture?
 
15 (accepting 13-17). 3 for Dan Blum and Pete. 2 for Peter.
 
> Concubine", but this was a tie. Name the other winner that year,
> a female-directed movie from New Zealand starring Holly Hunter
> and Harvey Keitel that was a Best Picture nominee at the Oscars.
 
"The Piano". 4 for Dan Blum, Marc, and Pete.
 
> movement, such as "The Death of Mr. Lazarescu", have to do
> with the hell of bureaucracy in a post-Communist society.
> Name the country.
 
Romania. 4 for Erland, Dan Blum, and Marc.
 
 
 
> In each case, we will name a team and you will answer with the
> corresponding row number on the table.
 
> 1. Juventus ["you-VENT-uss"].
 
#5. 4 for Peter, Björn, and Pete. 3 for Dan Blum.
 
> 2. Bayern Munich.
 
#12. 4 for Erland, Peter, Björn, and Pete. 3 for Dan Blum.
 
> 3. Barcelona.
 
#15. 4 for Erland, Peter, Björn, and Pete.
 
> 4. Chelsea.
 
#13. 4 for Peter, Björn, and Pete.
 
> 5. Real Madrid.
 
#9. 4 for Erland, Peter, Björn, and Pete. 3 for Dan Blum.
 
> 6. Manchester City.
 
#11. 4 for Peter, Björn, and Pete.
 
> 7. Zenit St. Petersburg.
 
#2. 4 for Peter and Pete. 2 for Dan Blum and Björn.
 
> 8. Dynamo Kiev.
 
#4. 4 for Peter and Pete. 3 for Björn. 2 for Dan Blum.
 
> 9. Paris St-Germain.
 
#7. 4 for Erland, Peter, Björn, and Pete.
 
> 10. Arsenal.
 
#3 4 for Peter, Björn, and Pete.
 
> So there were 6 decoys. Decode the rot13 if you'd like to identify
> the remaining teams for fun, but for no points.
 
> 11. Wolfsburg.
 
#1. Peter and Pete got this.
 
> 12. Benfica.
 
#16. Peter and Pete got this.
 
> 13. Atlético Madrid.
 
#6. Erland, Peter, and Pete got this.
 
> 14. PSV Eindhoven.
 
#10. Peter and Pete got this.
 
> 15. Gent.
 
#14. Peter and Pete got this.
 
> 16. Roma.
 
#8. Erland, Peter, and Pete got this.
 
 
Scores, if there are no errors:
 
GAME 3 ROUNDS-> 2 3 TOTALS
TOPICS-> Ent Spo
Pete Gayde 18 40 58
Peter Smyth 6 40 46
Björn Lundin 8 37 45
Dan Blum 23 13 36
Erland Sommarskog 16 16 32
Marc Dashevsky 24 0 24
Dan Tilque 0 0 0
 
--
Mark Brader "I'm not Richard, either.
Toronto Oh, wait: I am! Lucky me!"
msb@vex.net --Richard R. Hershberger
 
My text in this article is in the public domain.
Erland Sommarskog <esquel@sommarskog.se>: Jul 11 12:15AM +0200

>> are British, American, Serbian, Austrian, Danish, and Japanese.
 
> Bille August, Francis Ford Coppola, Luc and Jean-Pierre Dardenne,
> Michael Haneke, Shohei Imamura, Emir Kusturica, Ken Loach.
 
Aargh, sort of! I did consider Haneke, but I did not like the only film
I've seen from him. I was fairly sure that Kusturica was the Serbian
guy, but I could just no remember his name exactly. I did think of
Ken Loach, but I had problems with remembering his name exactly as
well. (Which is a pity, because some of his films have really been
brilliant.) Kurosawa seemed like a safe bet, and I note that was not
alone with that guess. But...

 
--
Erland Sommarskog, Stockholm, esquel@sommarskog.se
msb@vex.net (Mark Brader): Jul 10 06:12PM -0500

Mark Brader:
>>> are British, American, Serbian, Austrian, Danish, and Japanese.
 
>> Bille August, Francis Ford Coppola, Luc and Jean-Pierre Dardenne,
>> Michael Haneke, Shohei Imamura, Emir Kusturica, Ken Loach.

Erland Sommarskog:
> name exactly. I did think of Ken Loach, but I had problems with
> remembering his name exactly as well... Kurosawa seemed like a
> safe bet, and I note that was not alone with that guess. But...
 
Yeah, I think that rates an aargh.
 
In fact this one was the hardest question in the original game --
nobody there got it right either.
 
The directors listed won for the following movies (I'm showing
the titles as the IMDB gives them to me on each movie's main page,
whether in English or not):
 
Bille August [Danish]:
"The Best Intentions" (1992)
"Pelle the Conqueror" (1987)
 
Francis Ford Coppola [American]:
"The Conversation" (1974)
"Apocalypse Now" (1979) [tied with "the Tin Drum" for the award]
 
Luc and Jean-Pierre Dardenne [Belgian]:
"Rosetta" (1999)
"L'enfant" (2005)
 
Michael Haneke [German]:
"The White Ribbon" (2009)
"Amour" (2012)
 
Shohei Imamura [Japanese]:
"The Ballad of Narayama" (1983)
"The Eel" (1997) [tied with "Taste of Cherry"]
 
Emir Kusturica [Serbian]:
"When Father Was Away on Business" (1985)
"Underground" (1995)
 
Ken Loach [British]:
"The Wind That Shakes the Barley" (2006)
"I, Daniel Blake" (2016)
 
 
As to the answers people gave, Akira Kurosawa [Japanese] has won
one Palme d'Or for "Kagemusha" (1980) [tied with "All That Jazz"];
Lars von Trier [Danish] has one for "Dancer in the Dark" (2000);
and Werner Herzog [German] and Ken Russell [British] have been
nominated but never won.
 
--
Mark Brader, Toronto, msb@vex.net
"A system which depends upon the secrecy of its algorithm
is effectively a single-key code." -- William Brown II
 
My text in this article is in the public domain.
"Björn Lundin" <b.f.lundin@gmail.com>: Jul 10 06:38PM +0200

On 2016-07-08 03:34, Calvin wrote:
 
> 1 The words klutz and bagel were absorbed into English from which other language?
Jiddish
> 2 What is the more common name for the "Cyathea dealbata", the unofficial floral emblem of New Zealand?
Kiwi?
> 3 Which 1995 animated film was their first Disney movie to be based on the life of a real person?
Moses
> 4 In a standard tennis match what is the maximum number of consecutive set points one player might have?
2 - unless it is a tie break. If so then 6.
 
> 5 By what name is the Dutch-speaking area in Belgium's north known?
Flandern
> 6 What is one gross times one score?
non-metric ?
> 7 "There and Back Again" is an alternative title of which 1937 fantasy novel?
> 8 In 2022 which city will become the first to have hosted both the summer and winter Olympic Games?
> 9 Which 8-letter word refers to someone who renounces their religion?
converte
 
--
--
Björn
You received this digest because you're subscribed to updates for this group. You can change your settings on the group membership page.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it send an email to rec.games.trivia+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com.

No comments:

Post a Comment