Monday, February 05, 2024

Digest for rec.games.trivia@googlegroups.com - 5 updates in 1 topic

Erland Sommarskog <esquel@sommarskog.se>: Feb 04 12:04PM +0100


> "Black Lamb and Grey Falcon" is Dame Rebecca West's
> over-1,000-page account of a trip to which country in 1937?
> The country no longer exists.
 
Tuva (The only country that existed in 1937 but does not exist now
that I can think of on the top of my head. Seems like an unlikely answer,
though.)

> robots ran amok. Asimov decided it would be more interesting
> to write about robots with built-in ethical principles --
> principles that he called what?
 
Robotics

 
> What fictional technology did Asimov's robots use to
> accomplish reasoning? On "Star Trek: The Next Generation",
> Commander Data used the same technology.
 
Positron brains

> face weird or surrealistic quandaries and incomprehensible
> entanglements with bureaucracy. He died in 1924 from
> tuberculosis.
 
Franz Kafka

 
> A2. Before the Norman conquest under William I in 1066, there
> were 19 men who are sometimes considered kings of England.
> Name *any one*; his first name will be sufficient.
 
Edward the Confessor

 
> B1. The European Union now has 27 member countries. Within 1,
> in 1957, how many countries formed what was then called
> the European Common Market?
 
Six

> B2. The United Nations now has 193 member countries. Within 5,
> how many member countries were there when it was formed
> in 1945?
 
75

> post-war welfare state. Though he lost his own seat,
> running as a Liberal, in 1945, the newly-elected Labour
> government largely implemented the program he had set out.
 
Keyens

> * F. Colonial Powers
 
> F1. In Africa, which country colonized what are now Benin
> and Mali?
 
France

> F2. Which country colonized what is now Angola, in Africa,
> as well as Macau, which is now part of China?
 
Portugal
Dan Tilque <dtilque@frontier.com>: Feb 04 06:48AM -0800

On 2/3/24 21:07, Mark Brader wrote:
 
> In 1897 the "Sun" received a letter reading in part, "Papa
> says 'If you see it in the Sun, it's so'". What question
> did the writer want answered?
 
Is there a Santa Claus?
 
 
> In 1835 the "Sun" ran a series of 6 articles detailing
> discoveries supposely made by Sir John Herschel using a
> new telescope. What did they say he had discovered?
 
life on the Moon
 
 
> C1. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr7/dark-C1.jpg
 
> Which national capital city has a daily newspaper whose
> motto is "Democracy Dies in Darkness"?
 
Washington DC
 
 
> C2. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr7/dark-C2.jpg
 
> Which national capital city has a daily newspaper whose
> motto is "Fair Play and Daylight"?
 
Canberra, Australia
 
> robots ran amok. Asimov decided it would be more interesting
> to write about robots with built-in ethical principles --
> principles that he called what?
 
three laws of robotics
 
 
> What fictional technology did Asimov's robots use to
> accomplish reasoning? On "Star Trek: The Next Generation",
> Commander Data used the same technology.
 
positronic brain
 
> writers in English literature. His most famous work was
> inspired by a time years before, when he lived in Africa
> and served on a steamer going up and down the Congo River.
 
Joseph Conrad
 
 
> * A. The Ones Before
 
> A1. Before the US adopted its constitution in 1789, there were
> 14 presidents of the Continental Congress. Name *any one*.
 
Patrick Henry
 
 
> A2. Before the Norman conquest under William I in 1066, there
> were 19 men who are sometimes considered kings of England.
> Name *any one*; his first name will be sufficient.
 
Edward the Confessor
 
 
> B1. The European Union now has 27 member countries. Within 1,
> in 1957, how many countries formed what was then called
> the European Common Market?
 
6
 
 
> B2. The United Nations now has 193 member countries. Within 5,
> how many member countries were there when it was formed
> in 1945?
 
50
 
> the Arctic Archipelago to Canada, and Edward (Ned) Hanlan
> became the first Canadian world champion in any sport,
> which, of course, was rowing. What year was it?
 
1930
 
> go to what is now the company's main building in Toronto,
> you will see several signs mentioning the date of founding.
> What year was it?
 
1810
 
 
> * F. Colonial Powers
 
> F1. In Africa, which country colonized what are now Benin
> and Mali?
 
France
 
 
> F2. Which country colonized what is now Angola, in Africa,
> as well as Macau, which is now part of China?
 
Portugal
 
 
--
Dan Tilque
tool@panix.com (Dan Blum): Feb 04 03:56PM

> Last", which dealt with his experiences in World War II.
> His later work was influenced by more experimental writers
> such as Roland Barthes. Name him.
 
Italo Calvino
 
> published in 1955? One of his best-known films is "The
> Gospel According to St. Matthew". He died in violent and
> never-explained circumstances in 1975.
 
Antonioni
 
 
> In 1897 the "Sun" received a letter reading in part, "Papa
> says 'If you see it in the Sun, it's so'". What question
> did the writer want answered?
 
"Is there a Santa Claus?"
 
 
> In 1835 the "Sun" ran a series of 6 articles detailing
> discoveries supposely made by Sir John Herschel using a
> new telescope. What did they say he had discovered?
 
life on the Moon
 
 
> C1. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr7/dark-C1.jpg
 
> Which national capital city has a daily newspaper whose
> motto is "Democracy Dies in Darkness"?
 
Washington, DC
 
> C2. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr7/dark-C2.jpg
 
> Which national capital city has a daily newspaper whose
> motto is "Fair Play and Daylight"?
 
Ottawa
 
 
> "Black Lamb and Grey Falcon" is Dame Rebecca West's
> over-1,000-page account of a trip to which country in 1937?
> The country no longer exists.
 
Yugoslavia
 
> robots ran amok. Asimov decided it would be more interesting
> to write about robots with built-in ethical principles --
> principles that he called what?
 
Three Laws of Robotics
 
 
> What fictional technology did Asimov's robots use to
> accomplish reasoning? On "Star Trek: The Next Generation",
> Commander Data used the same technology.
 
positronic brain
 
> face weird or surrealistic quandaries and incomprehensible
> entanglements with bureaucracy. He died in 1924 from
> tuberculosis.
 
Kafka
 
> writers in English literature. His most famous work was
> inspired by a time years before, when he lived in Africa
> and served on a steamer going up and down the Congo River.
 
Conrad
 
 
> * A. The Ones Before
 
> A1. Before the US adopted its constitution in 1789, there were
> 14 presidents of the Continental Congress. Name *any one*.
 
James Madison
 
> A2. Before the Norman conquest under William I in 1066, there
> were 19 men who are sometimes considered kings of England.
> Name *any one*; his first name will be sufficient.
 
Harold
 
 
> B1. The European Union now has 27 member countries. Within 1,
> in 1957, how many countries formed what was then called
> the European Common Market?
 
8
 
> B2. The United Nations now has 193 member countries. Within 5,
> how many member countries were there when it was formed
> in 1945?
 
52
 
> post-war welfare state. Though he lost his own seat,
> running as a Liberal, in 1945, the newly-elected Labour
> government largely implemented the program he had set out.
 
Keynes
 
> the Arctic Archipelago to Canada, and Edward (Ned) Hanlan
> became the first Canadian world champion in any sport,
> which, of course, was rowing. What year was it?
 
1890; 1900
 
> go to what is now the company's main building in Toronto,
> you will see several signs mentioning the date of founding.
> What year was it?
 
1760; 1780
 
> * F. Colonial Powers
 
> F1. In Africa, which country colonized what are now Benin
> and Mali?
 
France
 
> F2. Which country colonized what is now Angola, in Africa,
> as well as Macau, which is now part of China?
 
Portugal
 
--
_______________________________________________________________________
Dan Blum tool@panix.com
"I wouldn't have believed it myself if I hadn't just made it up."
Pete Gayde <pete.gayde@gmail.com>: Feb 04 04:57PM -0600

Mark Brader wrote:
 
> In 1897 the "Sun" received a letter reading in part, "Papa
> says 'If you see it in the Sun, it's so'". What question
> did the writer want answered?
 
Is Santa Claus real?
 
 
> In 1835 the "Sun" ran a series of 6 articles detailing
> discoveries supposely made by Sir John Herschel using a
> new telescope. What did they say he had discovered?
 
Planets
 
 
> C1. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr7/dark-C1.jpg
 
> Which national capital city has a daily newspaper whose
> motto is "Democracy Dies in Darkness"?
 
Washington, DC
 
 
> C2. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr7/dark-C2.jpg
 
> Which national capital city has a daily newspaper whose
> motto is "Fair Play and Daylight"?
 
London, England
 
> robots ran amok. Asimov decided it would be more interesting
> to write about robots with built-in ethical principles --
> principles that he called what?
 
3 laws of robotics
 
 
> What fictional technology did Asimov's robots use to
> accomplish reasoning? On "Star Trek: The Next Generation",
> Commander Data used the same technology.
 
Artificial Intelligence
 
 
> * A. The Ones Before
 
> A1. Before the US adopted its constitution in 1789, there were
> 14 presidents of the Continental Congress. Name *any one*.
 
John Adams
 
 
> A2. Before the Norman conquest under William I in 1066, there
> were 19 men who are sometimes considered kings of England.
> Name *any one*; his first name will be sufficient.
 
Eldred; Henry
 
 
> B1. The European Union now has 27 member countries. Within 1,
> in 1957, how many countries formed what was then called
> the European Common Market?
 
12; 15
 
 
> B2. The United Nations now has 193 member countries. Within 5,
> how many member countries were there when it was formed
> in 1945?
 
100; 106
 
> the Arctic Archipelago to Canada, and Edward (Ned) Hanlan
> became the first Canadian world champion in any sport,
> which, of course, was rowing. What year was it?
 
1920; 1910
 
> go to what is now the company's main building in Toronto,
> you will see several signs mentioning the date of founding.
> What year was it?
 
1840; 1850
 
 
> * F. Colonial Powers
 
> F1. In Africa, which country colonized what are now Benin
> and Mali?
 
France
 
 
> F2. Which country colonized what is now Angola, in Africa,
> as well as Macau, which is now part of China?
 
Portugal
 
 
Pete Gayde
swp <stephen.w.perry@gmail.com>: Feb 04 04:06PM -0800

On Sunday, February 4, 2024 at 12:07:32 AM UTC-5, Mark Brader wrote:
> Last", which dealt with his experiences in World War II.
> His later work was influenced by more experimental writers
> such as Roland Barthes. Name him.
 
italo calvino
 
> published in 1955? One of his best-known films is "The
> Gospel According to St. Matthew". He died in violent and
> never-explained circumstances in 1975.
 
passolini
 
 
> In 1897 the "Sun" received a letter reading in part, "Papa
> says 'If you see it in the Sun, it's so'". What question
> did the writer want answered?
 
is there a santa claus? [yes, virginia, there is a santa claus]
 
 
> In 1835 the "Sun" ran a series of 6 articles detailing
> discoveries supposedly made by Sir John Herschel using a
> new telescope. What did they say he had discovered?
 
life on the moon
 
 
> C1. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr7/dark-C1.jpg
 
> Which national capital city has a daily newspaper whose
> motto is "Democracy Dies in Darkness"?
 
washington, dc
 
> C2. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr7/dark-C2.jpg
 
> Which national capital city has a daily newspaper whose
> motto is "Fair Play and Daylight"?
 
ottawa?
 
> of all places. One of his best-known books is 2001's
> "The Global Soul", a meditation on cultural globalization.
> Name him.
 
pico iyer
 
 
> "Black Lamb and Grey Falcon" is Dame Rebecca West's
> over-1,000-page account of a trip to which country in 1937?
> The country no longer exists.
 
yugoslavia
 
> robots ran amok. Asimov decided it would be more interesting
> to write about robots with built-in ethical principles --
> principles that he called what?
 
the three laws of robotics
 
 
> What fictional technology did Asimov's robots use to
> accomplish reasoning? On "Star Trek: The Next Generation",
> Commander Data used the same technology.
 
positronic brain
 
> face weird or surrealistic quandaries and incomprehensible
> entanglements with bureaucracy. He died in 1924 from
> tuberculosis.
 
franz kafka
 
> writers in English literature. His most famous work was
> inspired by a time years before, when he lived in Africa
> and served on a steamer going up and down the Congo River.
 
conrad?
 
 
> * A. The Ones Before
 
> A1. Before the US adopted its constitution in 1789, there were
> 14 presidents of the Continental Congress. Name *any one*.
 
john hancock
 
> A2. Before the Norman conquest under William I in 1066, there
> were 19 men who are sometimes considered kings of England.
> Name *any one*; his first name will be sufficient.
 
alfred [I suppose king arthur would not count here?]
 
 
> B1. The European Union now has 27 member countries. Within 1,
> in 1957, how many countries formed what was then called
> the European Common Market?
 
six
 
> B2. The United Nations now has 193 member countries. Within 5,
> how many member countries were there when it was formed
> in 1945?
 
fifty?
 
> post-war welfare state. Though he lost his own seat,
> running as a Liberal, in 1945, the newly-elected Labour
> government largely implemented the program he had set out.
 
beveridge?
 
> until 2017. She now holds a fellowship with the Atkinson
> Foundation and researches workers and technology. She is
> a frequent contributor to the "Toronto Star" and the CBC.
 
mackenzie
 
> the Arctic Archipelago to Canada, and Edward (Ned) Hanlan
> became the first Canadian world champion in any sport,
> which, of course, was rowing. What year was it?
 
1880
 
> go to what is now the company's main building in Toronto,
> you will see several signs mentioning the date of founding.
> What year was it?
 
[the hudson bay company] ... 1670?
 
> York University. He was known for his writings on modern
> European history, including "Postwar", concerning Europe
> after 1945. He died of ALS in 2010.
 
johnson ; africa
 
> suggested that, rather than by direct orders from the top,
> the Third Reich operated mostly by officials implementing
> policies that the leader would approve of.
 
dang nabbit I can't remember his name ... kershaw? kersh?
 
 
> * F. Colonial Powers
 
> F1. In Africa, which country colonized what are now Benin
> and Mali?
 
france
 
> F2. Which country colonized what is now Angola, in Africa,
> as well as Macau, which is now part of China?
 
portugal
 
> Toronto | the man with one fact is king."
> m...@vex.net | --"In the Loop", Jesse Armstrong et al.
 
> My text in this article is in the public domain.
 
swp, who is reading some of dear sweet isaac's essays again
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