Round Seven



Round Seven

Tossups

1. He pardoned the youth who killed him with a crossbow during his campaign against French King Philip II. He also came into conflict with Leopold V, whose men recognized him despite his pilgrim’s disguise by his insistence on eating roast chicken. He had thrown Leopold’s flag off the walls of Acre, a city he had reconquered in 1191, and Holy Roman Emperor Henry VI demanded a ransom equal to the amount he had raised in the Saladin Tithe, which had funded his expedition to the Holy Land. FTP, identify this English crusader king nicknamed “Lionheart.”

ANSWER: Richard I (accept Richard the Lionheart before the last word, but prompt on Richard)

2. His Short Symphony and other experimentations with jazz led Benny Goodman to commission his Clarinet Concerto, while the Bible inspired his 4 Motets and In the Beginning. He composed a spoken-word “portrait” of a former President, a work that quoted “Camptown Races,” and he wrote the song “The Open Prairie” for inclusion in a ballet choreographed by Eugene Loring. One of his ballets incorporates the Shaker hymn “Simple Gifts,” while another quotes “Bonyparte’s Retreat” as the theme of its “Hoe-Down.” FTP, identify this American composer of Billy the Kid, Rodeo, and Appalachian Spring.

ANSWER: Aaron Copland

3. Feynman and Gell-Mann proposed a V minus A Lagrangian for it to account for one of the ramifications of the Cabibbo-Kobayashi-Maskawa matrix. Its short range of influence, smaller than an atomic nucleus, is caused by its massive gauge bosons. Some interactions of it can result in a change of flavor, and they violate parity symmetry because it affects only left-handed particles. In addition, it is the only fundamental force that affects neutrinos. FTP, identify this force responsible for beta decay, which is carried by the W-plus, W-minus, and Z-zero bosons.

ANSWER: weak (nuclear) force (accept weak interactions)

4. This novel’s protagonist plays mental games based on the word “Quine,” which he finds in the book Who’ Who in the Spotlight. The main character's relationship with Rita parallels his earlier solicitation of the prostitute Monique, and he is angry to learn a defrocked Russian colonel, who is reduced to driving cabs has seduced his wife Valeria. After a trip to Shirley Holmes’ Camp Q the protagonist of this novel stays at an inn called The Enchanted Hunters, while earlier Frederick Beagle Jr. runs over Charlotte while she is crossing the street to mail letters that would reveal the protagonist’s interest in nymphets and Dolores Haze. For 10 points, name this novel about Humbert Humbert written by Vladimir Nabokov.

ANSWER: Lolita

5. This figure once had sixty diseases thrown at her by Namtar, but she was rescued by the eunuch Asu-shu-namir. One well-known story concerning this figure saw her descend through seven gates to the underworld, losing an article of clothing at each, where she confronted her sister Ereshkigal; during this time, all sexual activity ceased on earth. This daughter of Anu made an astral triangle with the sun and moon, Shamash and Sin, and had a sacred city at Erech. This lover of the god of the harvest, Tammuz, was rejected by Gilgamesh. Personifying the planet Venus and a counterpart to the Sumerian Innana, this is, FTP, what Babylonian goddess of fertility, love, and war?

ANSWER: Ishtar

6. Men fired from this entity included John Paton Davies, John Carter Vincent, and John Stewart Service, but no one ever identified all 205 of its employees who were mentioned in a speech in Wheeling, West Virginia. Dean Acheson defended the “China Hands” who had worked under him at this entity, but their resignation was demanded by John Foster Dulles. Joe McCarthy never produced a complete list of communist sympathizers in, FTP, what US department that has also been headed by Cordell Hull, George Marshall, Henry Kissinger, and Madeleine Albright?

ANSWER: United States State Department

7. One novel set in this country concerns a man, who starves after he is mistaken for a prophet by a town that coerces him to fast until rain comes to end a long drought. The Guide is part of a series about the fictional town of Malgudi in this country. In another work from this country, a boy who works at the Paradise Pickles Factory falsely testifies against the title character for the accidental drowning of Sophie Mol, and another work centers on a mother’s quest to find a husband for Lata. In addition to A Suitable Boy and The God of Small Things, another novel set in this country centers on a group of children born on August 15, 1947 and is narrated by the telepath Saleem Sinai. For 10 points, name this country home to Vikram Seth, Arundhati Roy, and Salman Rushdie.

ANSWER: India

8. In algebraic geometry, an affine variety is the set of solutions to a system of equations of this type, and modding out by an irreducible one of these always gives a field. The Abel-Ruffini theorem shows that there can be no formula in radicals for the solutions to these in degree greater than four, while Descartes’ Rule of Signs can be used to classify the type of their roots. FTP, identify this mathematical object composed of a finite sum of products of coefficients and variables, one example of which is x squared minus x plus 1.

ANSWER: polynomials

9. In 1991, their creation was ruled to be state action in Edmonson v. Leesville Concrete, and in 1972’s Johnson v. Louisiana, the Supreme Court refused to apply to the states a federal requirement that they be unanimous. Their composition is determined by voir dire, in which certain candidates can be dismissed after being questioned. The Seventh Amendment describes their role in civil suits, while the Sixth guarantees their use in criminal proceedings. FTP, identify these judicial bodies led by a foreman that usually consist of twelve “of one’s peers.”

ANSWER: juries (accept jury trial)

10. One of this city’s mayors, Karl Lueger, famously declared that it was up to him to define who was Jewish, and this city was the capital of Patriotic Front leader Englebert Dolfuss before his assassination. Its most iconic building is the reconstructed St. Stephen’s Cathedral, while the Tiergarten contains the world’s oldest zoo and is part of its Schonbrunn Palace, seat of government for such men as Franz Josef I and Klemens Von Metternich. FTP, identify this city on the Danube and namesake of an 1815 Congress that is now the capital of Austria.

ANSWER: Vienna (accept Wien)

11. Olefin metathesis incorporates one of these named for Grubbs, and a heterogeneous one, often palladium, figures in the hydrogenation of double bonds. It is the role played by iron in the Haber process, and reagents that cannot function as these are added in stoichiometric quantities. They achieve their principal effect by introducing an additional intermediate and hence an additional transition state. They are regenerated after a reaction is complete, and organic examples of them are called enzymes. FTP, identify these substances that lower the activation energy of a chemical reaction to increase its rate.

ANSWER: catalysts

12. One early author of this type spoke Oscan and wrote his Annales in Saturnian meter, while another feuded with Metelli and wrote the Bellum Poenicum. In addition to Ennius and Naevius, they included one who discussed the Catalinian conspiracy, Sallust, as well as Suetonius. One noted writer of this type wrote of the reigns from Augustus to Domitian, while another compiled 142 books starting with Romulus and ending with the death of Drusus the Elder. FTP, name this profession of Polybius, Tacitus, and Livy, who were later counterparts of Herodotus.

ANSWER: Roman historians (accept chroniclers)

13. One part of this work describes the title location as “the land of hot and languorous nights . . . where the kisses are like cascades!” In addition to “Lesbos”, another poem in this collection is addressed to “mother of memories, mistress of mistresses” and is titled “The Balcony”. One poem describes what “the men of a crew” do “to amuse themselves”, and another poem talks about a figure who “like the stab of a knife / entered my plaintive heart.” Containing poems such as “The Albatross” and “The Vampyr”, this work is dedicated to Théophile Gautie, and includes the sections Wine, Death, and Spleen and Ideal. For 10 points, name this decadent poetry collection by Charles Baudelaire.

ANSWER: Les Fleurs du Mal [or The Flowers of Evil]

14. The altered peptide ligand approach to this has been used to deliver Flt3 to expand dendritic cells in mice for cancer treatment, but cannot operate in humans. Tattooing was recently found to be a more effective mode of the DNA type of this the method in which viruses deliver epitopes to surface muscle tissue. Traditional methods of it attempt to elicit a cytotoxic T-cell response or the production of antibodies using inactive pertussis toxin to carry pathogen polysaccharides, but they are unavailable for malaria and tuberculosis. FTP, identify this prophylactic approach to combating disease, which, for hepatitis B, involves three injections.

ANSWER: vaccine (accept word forms)

15. Supporters of this movement included Lysander Spooner, Gerrit Smith, Wendell Phillips, and Benjamin Lundy, while many others joined the American Colonization Society. One leading member of it was murdered in Alton, Illinois, while another condemned the Constitution as a “covenant with death” in The Liberator and a third published The North Star after returning from England. Elijah Lovejoy, William Lloyd Garrison, John Brown, and Frederick Douglass were among the leaders of, FTP, what movement to end slavery?

ANSWER: abolitionism

16. He intentionally airballed a foul shot to finish with 61 points in honor of his late grandfather in a game for West Forsyth High School, the same year he signed with Wake Forest University, where he was later criticized for elbowing Julius Hodge in the groin. Drafted fourth in 2005 behind rival Deron Williams, he scored 35 points in the first game of the 2008 playoffs to beat the Dallas Mavericks, but still finished second to Kobe Bryant in the MVP voting and lost to the Spurs. FTP, identify this point guard for the New Orleans Hornets.

ANSWER: Chris Paul (accept CP3)

17. One critic claimed this man’s Portrait of Victor Chocquet could induce yellow fever in pregnant women. He depicted wooing country-folk in The Amorous Shepherd and painted a portrait of Ambroise Vollard. This longtime friend of Émile Zola painted series of bathers and card players and liked to draw the Jas de Bouffan, where he lived in Provence. A legendarily slow worker, he is known for a genre including Rideau and Cruchon et Compotier. FTP, name this post-Imperssionist who painted still lifes of apples and made a series of paintings of Mont Sainte-Victoire.

ANSWER: Paul Cézanne

18. In one of his works Citizen Barlow goes on a journey to find “The City of Bones,” and later Caesar shoots Solly Two Kings, while in another work Harold Loomis searches for his wife Martha after he is released from the title character’s chain gang. In addition to Gem of the Ocean and Joe Turner’s Come and Gone, Sturdyvant’s withdrawal of a contract offer leads to Levee stabbing Toledo at the end of one play, while in another of his works Alberta dies giving birth to the illegitimate child Raynell, who Rose agrees to raise despite the infidelity of her husband Troy Maxson. For ten points, name this playwright who wrote Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom, The Piano Lesson, and Fences.

ANSWER: August Wilson

19. Heretical groups to break off from this religion include the Minas sect and the Udasi sect, and each sect disagrees over which biographies of this religion’s founder, called Janamsakhis, are canonical. Its followers wear the “five K’s,” which include a metal bracelet and a comb. This religion’s leaders included Tegh Bahadur, who was martyred, and Ram Das, who founded Amritsar, but Gobind Singh was its last guru and was succeeded by the Adi Granth. FTP, identify this religion of the Indian subcontinent that was founded by Guru Nanak.

ANSWER: Sikhism

20. The formation of one type of them involves the Sedov-Taylor phase, while another type includes one with features like the Spire and the Pillars of Creation. Another type, exemplified by the Cat’s Eye and the famously bipolar Butterfly, is denser than a type commonly called H II regions, like the Horsehead one. In addition to emission and reflection varieties, these include supernova remnants and dark and planetary varieties. Famously exemplified by the Crab and Great Orion ones, these are, FTP, what clouds of interstellar gas and dust that give rise to new stars?

ANSWER: nebulae

Bonuses

1. For ten points each, answer these questions about al-Sayyidah Zaynab.

(10) Zaynab’s brother was this son of Ali ibn Abi Talib and grandson of the Prophet Muhammad whose martyrdom is celebrated by Shi’ites on Ashoura.

ANSWER: Hussein ibn Ali

(10) Zaynab was present with her brother Hussein at this siege in Iraq where Hussein was killed. After this battle, she was forced to march unveiled to Damascus.

ANSWER: Battle of Karbala

(10) Karbala, like the Arab garrison cities of Kufa and Basra, is located within the borders of this present-day country.

ANSWER: Iraq

2. The Meissner effect dictates that this phenomenon excludes internal magnetic fields; and cuprate-perovskite materials can exhibit it at temperatures as high as one hundred thirty-five Kelvin. For ten points each:

(10) Identify this property, characterized by the complete loss of electrical resistance.

ANSWER: superconductivity (prompt on word forms)

(10) Whereas Ginzberg-Landau theory examines superconductivity on a macro level, this theory suggests that superconductivity results from Bose condensation of electron pairs into Cooper pairs.

ANSWER: BCS theory (or Bardeen, Cooper, Schrieffer theory, in any order)

(10) Since each electron in a Cooper pair has half-integer spin, the Cooper pair taken as a unit has integer spin and so is considered one of these particles.

ANSWER: bosons

3. The title of its second section “The Education of a Personage,” reflects the persona/personage distinction pressed upon its protagonist by his mentor, Monsignor Darcy. For ten points each –

(10) Identify this novel, in which Amory Blaine falls for Eleanor while he is reciting Poe, and later is infatuated with Rosalind Connage.

ANSWER: This Side of Paradise

(10) This author of This Side of Paradise is better known for writing The Great Gatsby.

ANSWER: Francis Scott Fitzgerald

(10) The Great Gatsby is narrated by this Minnesotan, cousin to Daisy Buchanan.

ANSWER: Nick Carraway (accept either)

4. He was a shepherd in Midian, where he had fled after killing an Egyptian, when he saw the burning bush. For ten points each –

(10) Identify this prophet who was the brother of Aaron.

ANSWER: Moses

(10) Aaron created this false bovine idol while Moses was busy receiving the Ten Commandments.

ANSWER: golden calf

(10) This older sister hid the baby Moses in the reeds so that he wouldn’t be killed by Pharoah’s orders.

ANSWER: Miriam

5. Identify these abstract terms from anthropology for ten points each.

(10) In The Golden Bough, James Frazer mused on this topic, which he believed preceded the development of religion and was a stage through which all societies passed. It is defined as the power of influencing events by invoking the supernatural.

ANSWER: magic (prompt on anything close, but only accept the word magic)

(10) Joseph Campbell was interviewed by Bill Moyers in a special on “The Power of [this],” which included segments called “The Hero’s Adventure” and “Masks of Eternity.” Albert Camus wrote an essay about this of Sisyphus.

ANSWER: myth (because these are taken from titles, don’t prompt on or accept other answers)

(10) Clifford Geertz’s essay “Notes on a Balinese Cockfight” is the most famous part of his The Interpretation of this topic, while Alfred Kroeber and Clyde Kluckhohn found 164 ways to define it.

ANSWER: culture

6. Asher B. Durand painted this man standing with William Cullen Bryant in Kindred Spirits. For ten points each –

(10) Identify this painter of The Oxbow who also created “The Course of Empire” series.

ANSWER: Thomas Cole

(10) Cole is often identified as the founder of an art movement named for this New York river that also included Asher Durand and Frederic Church.

ANSWER: Hudson River (School)

(10) This Hudson River School artist played with the contrast between light and dark in his Storm in the Rocky Mountains.

ANSWER: Albert Bierstadt

7. Augustinas Voldemaras, the leader of the Iron Wolf Party, was dictator of this country until Antanas Smetona ousted him in a 1929 coup. For ten points each –

(10) Name this Baltic nation whose capital is Vilnius.

ANSWER: Lithuania

(10) King Jogalia united Lithuania and Poland when he married Queen Jadwiga and soon came into conflict with this order founded at Acre and led by Grand Master Ulrich von Juningen that launched crusades against pagan areas of the Baltic.

ANSWER: Teutonic Knights (or Teutonic Order)

(10) Jogalia routed the Teutonic Knights at this 1410 battle, which began the Order’s decline.

ANSWER: Battle of Grunwald (or Battle of Tannenberg)

8. He sparked controversy in 1998 by refusing an invitation to meet with Queen Elizabeth II after the success of his novel Jack Maggs. For ten points each –

(10) Name this author whose works include Illywhacker and Theft: A Love Story, who wrote about a historical bandit in The True History of the Kelly Gang.

ANSWER: Peter Carey

(10) This Carey novel centers on an Anglican priest and a factory heiress, who make an outrageous bet about transporting a glass church hundreds of miles.

ANSWER: Oscar and Lucinda

(10) Carey comes from this country that is home to Patrick White, whose novel Voss portrays a 19th-century Outback explorer.

ANSWER: Australia

9. Males in this phylum have special spikes made of chitin, which are inserted into the female, into whom the amoeba-like sperm cells of this phylum literally crawl. For ten points each –

(10) Identify this pseudocoelomate phylum of roundworms whose mating habits I just described.

ANSWER: nematodes (or nematoda)

(10) Perhaps the best-known nematode is this common model organism.

ANSWER: C. elegans (or Caenorhabditis elegans)

(10) Nematodes are bound by an inelastic cuticle. While they can move and bend due to their hydrostatic skeletal system, they cannot increase in volume without going through this process, discarding their old cuticles.

ANSWER: molting

10. His eponymous 1952 “Note” about the unification of Germany was rejected, just as he had rejected Marshall Plan aid for his country. For ten points each –

(10) Identify this Soviet leader who died in 1953.

ANSWER: Josef Stalin

(10) This longtime foreign minister in Stalin’s government signed a 1939 non-aggression pact with Joachim von Ribbentrop; three years later, he signed an alliance with England against Nazi Germany.

ANSWER: Vyacheslav Molotov

(10) Immediately after Stalin’s death, this man became Soviet Ambassador to Hungary, in which position he crushed the 1956 Hungarian uprising. In 1982, he succeeded Leonid Brezhnev as general secretary of the Soviet Communist Party.

ANSWER: Yuri Andropov

11. For ten points each, identify these countries in which recent years have seen a changing of the guard.

(10) Nicolas Sarkozy, the son of Hungarian immigrants, became the president of this European country in May 2007.

ANSWER: France

(10) January 2008 saw the re-election of Mikheil Saakashvili as this country’s president. In 2003, he had replaced Eduard Shevardnadze in the Rose Revolution.

ANSWER: Georgia

(10) King Gyanendra of this country had declared martial law to try to defeat Maoist guerillas, but the people got angry at him. In 2008, this country dissolved its monarchy.

ANSWER: Nepal

12. Its most controversial chapter was “Profession of Faith of the Savoyard Vicar,” and it discussed the best ways to educate a child. For ten points each –

(10) Identify this treatise published in 1762.

ANSWER: Émile; Or, On Education

(10) This Swiss philosopher who also wrote Reveries of a Solitary Walker wrote Émile.

ANSWER: Jean-Jacques Rousseau

(10) Rousseau may be best known for writing about this concept that articulates the relationship between the people and their government.

ANSWER: the social contract (accept du contrat social)

13. Answer these questions about rivers in Southeast Asia for ten points each.

(10) The Red River flows through this country’s capital city of Hanoi before emptying into the Gulf of Tonkin.

ANSWER: Vietnam

(10) The largest river flowing through Vietnam is this 11th longest river in the world, which empties into the South China Sea in southern Vietnam.

ANSWER: Mekong River (accept Khong River; accept Song Me Kong)

(10) All or nothing, the longest international boundary formed by the Mekong is between these two countries.

ANSWER: Laos and Thailand (either order, but both required)

14. Organic examples of this process are often carried out with sodium borohydride, while in general it can be accomplished by Lewis bases. For ten points each –

(10) Identify this process, which frequently occurs at a cathode.

ANSWER: reduction

(10) This term names the opposite of reduction, occurring at the anode. It occurs when compounds lose electrons, thereby increasing, rather reducing, their positive charge.

ANSWER: oxidation

(10) Organic reductions frequently have to be followed by this kind of step, often performed with water or hydronium. It takes care of any deprotonated groups that ought to be protonated in the final product.

ANSWER: workup

15. The protagonist is pitted against Jack Lawton in Father Arnall’s class, racing to do sums as Lancaster and York, and later he is beaten by Father Dolan for breaking his glasses. For ten points each –

(10) Identify this stream-of-consciousness novel, which opens with the character being told a story about a moocow by his father.

ANSWER: Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man

(10) Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man was written by this author of stories such as “Araby” and “The Dead,” best known for creating characters like Steven Dedalus and Leopold Bloom.

ANSWER: James Joyce

(10) Dedalus and Bloom appear together in this work. While Molly Bloom is not quite Penelope, having had an affair with Blazes Boylan, her soliloquy, recalling when she met her husband, ends the novel on a note of faith.

ANSWER: Ulysses

16. “This Little Babe” and “Wolcum Yole” are two of the movements in his Ceremony of Carols for harp and boy choir. For ten points each –

(10) Identify this composer of A Young Person’s Guide to the Orchestra.

ANSWER: Benjamin Britten

(10) This 85-minute Britten work uses words from Wilfred Owen’s poetry and requires two orchestras as well as an organ and a boy choir.

ANSWER: “War Requiem”

(10) Britten also composed Billy Budd, an opera based on a novella by this American author who also created Captain Ahab.

ANSWER: Herman Melville

17. This daughter of either Atlas or Nereus lived on Ogygia would not let a certain hero go until Hermes came to demand his release. For ten points each –

(10) Identify this nymph.

ANSWER: Calypso

(10) This hero of the Trojan War was taking the long way back to Ithaca when he got stuck on Calypso’s island.

ANSWER: Odysseus (do not accept Ulysses)

(10) Among those on Ithaca who recognized Odysseus after he returned home was this faithful dog who promptly dropped dead upon seeing his master return.

ANSWER: Argos

18. Answer these questions about trouble caused by Irish immigrants for ten points each.

(10) George Washington Plunkett was among the inner circle of this political machine, which dominated New York politics until its defeat by Fiorello LaGuardia. Its most famous leader was Boss Tweed.

ANSWER: Tammany Hall (or Tammany Tigers)

(10) Major General John Wool had to declare martial law in New York City in 1863 because of this kind of disturbance, which was perpetrated mostly by the Irish.

ANSWER: draft riot (accept clear knowledge equivalents)

(10) During the 1870s, Irish immigrants working as coal miners in Pennsylvania formed this secret union-like society and led several strikes before they were shut down and arrested by the Pinkertons.

ANSWER: Molly Maguires (or Mollies)

19. Early programming languages that used it include Simula and Smalltalk. For ten points each:

(10) This programming philosophy, in which methods and attributes are defined as members of a class, has more recently been the basis of Java and C++.

ANSWER: object oriented programming (or OOP)

(10) One feature of object-oriented programming is this creation of derived classes from parent classes, which pass down their methods and attributes.

ANSWER: inheritance

(10) This practice involves disclosing only the publicly accessible interface of a class so that other classes can interact with it without knowing the details of its implementation.

ANSWER: encapsulation (prompt on information hiding)

20. In this play, Elmire attempts with little luck to convince her husband that the title character is trying to seduce her. For ten points each –

(10) Identify this play, in which the title character convinces Orgon that he’s deepy religious and eventually controls all of Orgon’s finances

ANSWER: Tartuffe, or the hypocrite (or Tartuffe, ou l’Imposteur)

(10) This French author of The Miser and The School for Wives wrote Tartuffe.

ANSWER: Moliere (or Jean-Baptist Poquelin)

(10) Moliere is also famous for a play about the similarly named Argan who believes that at the end the gypsy dancers make him into a doctor. Legend has it that Moliere died during the fourth performance.

ANSWER: Le Malade imaginaire (or The Hypochondriac; or The Imaginary Invalid)

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