Round 12
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Related Tossup/Bonus Round
Tossup One. One of the first Native American tribes that the Spanish tried to convert, these Plains Indians lived in skin tepees during hunting expeditions and were known for the extensive use of tattoos. For 10 points, name this tribe that had lived along the Arkansas River, for which a city in south central Kansas is named.
ANSWER: Wichita
BONUS. Identify the following words derived from Native American languages for 10 points each.
• This location’s name is derived from the Choctaw words for “red people.”
ANSWER: Oklahoma
• Translated as “crooked river” is this word that names a northeast Ohio county.
ANSWER: Cuyahoga
Tossup Two. Ironworker Jean Tijou did the iron gates of its choir, master woodcarver Grinling Gibbons did the choir stalls and organ case, and architect Nicholas Hawksmoor also played a role in this edifice, constructed of Portland stone, in a classical Baroque style. For 10 points, name this London landmark, rebuilt between 1675 and 1710.
ANSWER: Saint Paul’s Cathedral
BONUS. Identify these pupils from Saint Paul’s School, which was located in the churchyard of St. Paul’s Cathedral.
• Made a duke by Queen Anne, this English general coordinated the Grand Alliance against Louis XIV. His victories included the Battle of Blenheim.
ANSWER: John Churchill [prompt on Churchill; prompt on Reichsfürst; accept 1st Duke of Marlborough; accept Marquess of Blandford; accept Earl of Marlborough; accept Baron Churchill of Sandridge; accept Lord Churchill of Eyemouth]
• In 1685, he created the first meteorological map, but he is better known for his conjecture that objects seen in 1531, 1607, and 1862 were the same thing.
ANSWER: Edmund Halley
Tossup Three. In 1989, because of untimely availability, two items were dropped in favor of the index of consumer expectations and change in manufacturers’ unfilled orders of durable goods. For 10 points, name this grouping of eleven data points, which signals a change in the level of economic activity months in advance.
ANSWER: leading economic indicators
BONUS. Identify these other economic measures.
• Also called the Cost of Living Index, the Bureau of Labor Statistics publishes one for for All/Urban Consumers and another version of this index for Urban Wage Owners and Clerical Workers.
ANSWER: Consumer Price Index
• The index of industrial production is among this set of economic indicators which measure how well the economy is doing at the moment.
ANSWER: coincident indicators
Tossup Four. His antiwar novel Three Soldiers came from his experience as a World War I ambulance driver, but increasing conservatism and disillusionment with New Deal liberalism appear in later works, such as Adventures of a Young Man, Number One, and The Grand Design, the books of his District of Columbia trilogy. For 10 points, name this novelist, whose best known trilogy includes The 42nd Parallel.
ANSWER: John Dos Passos
BONUS. For 10 points each, name the authors of the following trilogies.
• The Good Earth, Sons, A House Divided
ANSWER: Pearl Sydenstricker Buck
• The Silent Planet, Perelandra, That Hideous Strength
ANSWER: Clive Staples Lewis
Tossup Five. Alfred and Ludwig Nobel owned oil refineries in this city, which was conquered from Persia by Peter the Great in 1723. It remains a major center of world trade in oil and caviar. For 10 points, identify this city, lowest in elevation of all world capitals, the seat of government in Azerbaijan.
ANSWER: Baku
BONUS. Garry Kasparov was born in Baku. Answer the following regarding Kasparov and Russian chess for 10 points apiece.
• This man was world chess champion from 1947 to 1957, 1958 to 1960, and 1961 to 1963, losing the championship to Vassily Smyslov, Mikhail Tal, and Tigran Petrosian, respectively.
ANSWER: Mikhail Botvinnik
• Kasparov has played IBM’s Deep Blue supercomputer twice. Deep Blue is one of the most advanced examples of this processing technique, in which several operations are executed simultaneously and work is evenly divided among available processors—256 in Deep Blue.
ANSWER: parallel processing [prompt on multiprocessing; do not accept “coprocessing”]
Tossup Six. The name’s the same. The guardsman in Hamlet who observes that “something is rotten in the state of Denmark”. The Roman general who was victorious at Syracuse and Capua during the Second Punic War. For 10 points, give the monniker which they share with the first name of the crime boss in Pulp Fiction.
ANSWER: Marcellus
BONUS. Identify the common name, 20-10.
• 20: It’s the surname of the Polish general who led an insurrection against Russian rule after serving as a colonel in the Continental Army during the American Revolution.
• 10: It also names the highest mountain in Australia, named for the Polish colonel.
ANSWER: Kosciusko
Tossup Seven. Located inside the inner ear, this structure has three parts, the superior, posterior, and lateral chambers, each of which is set in a different plane of space. For 10 points, name these fluid-filled chambers that are never in equilibrium, critical for balance.
ANSWER: semicircular canals
BONUS. [Distribute handout from end of packet.] Prepare for a visual aid. Identify the following geometric curves that involve circles for 10 points each.
• This curve in Figure A is traced by a point on the circumference of a circle rolled inside a larger fixed circle.
ANSWER: hypocycloid [do not accept any variations or partial answers]
• A cardioid as shown in Figure B is formed by a circle of radius A rolling around another circle. Give the value in terms of A of the second circle’s value.
ANSWER: A
Tossup Eight. In Roman myth, she was the only daughter of Numitor, the king of Alba Longa. After her father’s death, she was forced to become a Vestal Virgin, but she was put to death after an ill-fated affair with Mars. For 10 points, name this woman, the mother of Romulus and Remus.
ANSWER: Rhea Silvia
BONUS. Answer these related questions about Romulus for 10 points each.
• Plutarch recorded the legend that Romulus invited members of this tribe to a feast and wound up carrying off their women.
ANSWER: Sabines [or Sabinus; or Sabini]
• Romulus and the Sabine leader Tatius stand ready for battle, but between them is a large group of women and children led by a toga-clad Sabine woman Hersilia in this painter’s Intervention of the Sabine Women, which supposedly took place a few years after the abduction of the women.
ANSWER: Jacques-Louis David
Tossup Nine. The composer and the leading performer of the oratorio The Manger, he formed a noted trio with violinist Jacques Thibaud and pianist Alfred Cortot. For 10 points, name this founder of the Prades music festival and noted Bach performer, one of the great cellists of the mid-twentieth century.
ANSWER: Pablo Casals
BONUS. Identify these Johann Sebastian Bach works for 10 points each.
• Glenn Gould made a career out of playing this 1742 set of harpsichord practice exercises.
ANSWER: The Goldberg Variations
• An 1829 performance of this oratorio by an orchestra under Felix Mendelssohn may have renewed interest in Bach. It interprets a gospel’s telling of Christ’s final hours.
ANSWER: Saint Matthew’s Passion [accept The Passion of Saint Matthew; accept The Passion According to Saint Matthew; accept Matthäuspassion]
Tossup Ten. The taking of Petrograd through the complicity of the government’s forces led to the dissolution of the Duma. Nicholas II abdicated in favor of his brother, who then ceded power to the provisional government. For 10 points, name this 1917 event that ended the Russian tsardom.
ANSWER: The February Revolution
BONUS. For 10 points, identify the following regarding other February revolutions.
• His followers seized the government of Reza Shah Pahlevi and Shahpur Bakhtiar in February 1979.
ANSWER: Ayatollah Ruholla Khomeini [accept The Ayatollah]
• This government was formed on February 4, 1861, in Montgomery, Alabama.
ANSWER: Confederate States of America [prompt on The Confederacy]
SCORE CHECK
DISTRIBUTE LISTS OF AVAILABLE CATEGORY QUIZ BONI TO BOTH TEAMS NOW
Category Quiz Tossups
Tossup One. The father was an adulterer who caused the death of Gorlois, husband of the father’s mistress. The son’s wife had an affair with the son’s best friend, and the son accidentally slept with the daughter. For 10 points, name this dysfunctional family which ruled mythical Britain, members of which included Uther and Arthur.
ANSWER: the Pendragons
Tossup Two. This term was coined in 1866 by German biologist Ernst Haeckel, from the Greek for “household.” Haeckel defined it as “the science of relations between the organism and the surrounding outer world.” For 10 points, name this science, which studies the relationships interlinking members of Earth’s household.
ANSWER: ecology
Tossup Three. During the 1999-2000 season, Pavel Bure (Boo-RAY) accomplished this feat twice in six days. But he still has a long way to go to catch all-time leader Wayne Gretzky, who has over 60 of these to his credit. For 10 points, name this single game goal-scoring feat that often leads to headgear finding its way on to the ice from the stands.
ANSWER: hat trick
Tossup Four. Poking fun at Clisthenes, a noted homosexual; Dionysus dressing as Heracles; Dionysus being mistaken for his slave Xanthias; gibing Cleophon, a leader who opposed peace in the Peloponnesian War; and a contest between Aeschylus and Euripides to see whose writing is better. For 10 points, name the play in which one can find these elements, a 405 BCE comedy by Aristophanes.
ANSWER: The Frogs [or Batrachoi]
Tossup Five. Between 1975 and 1980, the population of this area was reduced from six hundred thousand to barely three hundred thousand by war, first civil and then against an invading power. For 10 points, name this country, colonized by Portugal, which became independent of Indonesia in 1999.
ANSWER: East Timor
Tossup Six. His earlier compositions found their basis in Hindu literature. He earned his living as a trombonist and conductor before receiving a teaching position at the London Royal College of Music in 1919. For 10 points, name this British composer of Savriti, At the Boar’s Head, Hecuba’s Lament, and The Planets.
ANSWER: Gustav Holst
Tossup Seven. Linda is humiliated at being pregnant and leaves her son John accidentally in a reservation in New Mexico, where Bernard and Lenina meet him twenty years later. For 10 points, name this 1931 novel set in 632 A.F. where one meets these characters, about a hedonistic, genetically-controlled society, created by Aldous Huxley.
ANSWER: Brave New World
Tossup Eight. He only served in political office for ninety days in 1848, filling in for an indicted Congressman from New York City, but he lost favor with his colleagues by reporting various incidents of legislative fraud and corruption. For 10 points, name this politician better known as owner of the New York Tribune.
ANSWER: Horace Greeley
SCORE CHECK AFTER THE BONUS
Category Quiz Boni
American Literature: The 1900s
He admired the times of Thebes, Camelot, and Priam’s neighbors, while he loathed khaki suits and money. For 15 points, name this man who was “born too late,” the subject of a 1907 poem by Edwin Arlington Robinson.
ANSWER: Miniver Cheevy
Biological Sciences: The 1910s
He moderated his criticism of Darwinism in his 1913 work Heredity and Sex and his 1916 work A Critique of the Theory of Evolution, based on his own experiments with fruit flies. For 15 points, name this embryologist and geneticist who developed the chromosome theory of heredity.
ANSWER: Thomas Hunt Morgan
Dance: The 1920s
Following its use in the 1923 black musical Runnin’ Wild, this dance became a national craze. For 15 points, name this social dance characterized by toes-in heels-out twisting steps.
ANSWER: the Charleston
Physical Sciences: The 1940s
1947 was the year that John Bardeen, Walter Brattain, and William Shockley of Bell Labs finalized their design of it. For 15 points, name this solid-state device.
ANSWER: transistors
Pop Culture: The 1950s
He won an Oscar for his portrayal of the luckless soldier Maggio in the 1953 film From Here to Eternity. For 15 points, name this entertainer better known for his one thousand, four hundred and fourteen studio recordings and smooth voice.
ANSWER: Francis Albert “Frank” Sinatra
Religion, Mythology, Philosophy: The 1960s
It was held between 1962 and 1965, having been called by Pope John XXIII. For 15 points, name this convention aimed at reforming the Catholic Church and at evaluating its relationship with other world religions.
ANSWER: Second Vatican Council [accept Vatican Ii]
U.S. Culture: The 1970s
First organized by Senator Gaylord Nelson and Denis Hayes, it is now coordinated by an international council overseeing smaller national and local celebrations. For 15 points, name this day set aside for publicizing environmental causes, held on April 22.
ANSWER: Earth Day
World Geography: The 1930s
Originally built to incarcerate political opponents, the first Nazi concentration camp established near this town served as a laboratory using human subjects. For 15 points, identify the Bavarian town on the Amper River associated by name with this camp, located just northwest of Munich.
ANSWER: Dachau
World History: The 1980s
First and last name required. Though sentenced to death on charges of murder and subversion, he left the United States in 1980 for treatment of a heart condition. For 15 points, name this politician assassinated in 1983 upon arriving home at the Manila Airport, presumably by the orders of President Marcos.
ANSWER: Benigno “Ninoy” Simeon Aquino, Jr.
World Literature: The 1990s
Rents, Sick Boy, Mother Superior, Swanney, Spuds, and Seeker are a rag-tag bunch of heroin-addicted Edinburgh youths in what critically acclaimed 1994 Irvine Welsh book?
ANSWER: Trainspotting
Stretch Round
Tossup One. It stated, “Every age and generation must be free to act for itself in all cases as the ages and generations which preceded it. The variety and presumption of governing beyond the grave is the most ridiculous and insolent of all tyrannies.” For 10 points—name this response to Edmund Burke’s Reflexions on the Revolution in France, a stirring pamphlet by Thomas Paine.
ANSWER: The Rights of Man
BONUS. Name the phylum to which the following organisms belong for 10 points each.
• Paramecia
ANSWER: ciliophora
• Flukes, tapeworms, and planari
ANSWER: platyhelminthes
• Hornworts, mosses, and liverworts
ANSWER: bryophyta
Tossup Two. Born in Delft in 1632, only 35 of his paintings have survived due to his methodical work habits and his comparatively short life. He recorded the effects of light with a subtlety, delicacy, and purity of color that have probably never been surpassed, as evident in the works Girl Asleep at a Table and Maidservant Pouring Milk. For 10 points—name this contributor to Dutch Baroque, the artist of Girl with a Red Hat and Woman with a Water Jug.
ANSWER: Jan Vermeer [or Jan van der Meer van Delft]
BONUS. Identify the writers of these posthumous works released in 1999 for 15 points each.
• It took this writer 40 years to write the manuscript for this novel otherwise entitled Juneteenth, and he still didn’t finish it. Name this writer better known for his only other published novel, Invisible Man.
ANSWER: Ralph Ellison
• True at First Light was this author’s somewhat fictional yet unpublished memoir, written about a 1953 safari where Mary stalks a blank-maned lion while her husband, the author, stalks Debba.
ANSWER: Ernest Hemingway
Tossup Three. In German it begins “Unser Vater der Du bist im Himmel,” in French it begins “Notre Pere qui es aux cieux,” and in Spanish it begins “Padre nuestro que estas en los cielos.” For 10 points—identify this prayer whose Latin beginning is, “Pater noster qui es in caelis.”
ANSWER: The Lord’s Prayer
BONUS. Identify these potential candidates for Vice-President in 2000 for 10 points each.
• This one-time Presidential candidate and Reagan cabinet member may be tapped to add gender balance to the Republican ticket.
ANSWER: Elizabeth Hanford Dole
• This senator from electoral vote-rich California is already considered the leading contender for the Democratic Vice-Presidential nomination.
ANSWER: Dianne Feinstein
• He was an early G.W. Bush supporter in the important state of New York, where he is currently governor.
ANSWER: George Pataki
Tossup Four. Born in Doswell, Virginia, he was given a lethal injection on October 4, 1989 at the age of nineteen. He fathered many offspring for the purpose of producing a physically superior lineage. For 10 points—name this sports legend, who joined Seattle Slew and Affirmed as 1970s Triple Crown winners.
ANSWER: Secretariat
BONUS. Identify the following about a certain island in the Mediterannean for the stated number of points.
• For 5 points, this island, with capital at Nicosia, has been split into Greek and Turkish portions since 1974.
ANSWER: Cyprus
• For 10, talk of reuniting Cyprus has come up recently. If Cyprus does in fact reunite, it will be eligible to join this economic organization, which is also considering a membership application from Turkey.
ANSWER: European Economic Union
• For 15 points, Cyprus split shortly after a pro-enosis group deposed this leader.
ANSWER: Archbishop Makarios
Tossup Five. In this year, the Associated Press established its first foreign bureau in Halifax, Louisa May Alcott sold publishing rights to The Inheritance, and Henry David Thoreau penned “An Essay on Civil Disobedience.” For 10 points—name the year in which all these events occurred, along with the largest gold rush in U.S. history.
ANSWER: 1849
BONUS. Name the programming language, 30-20-10.
• 30: It was the first programming language to use name-value pairs.
• 20: It was created at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory by Larry Wall.
• 10: This string-processing language is commonly used to process web CGI scripts.
ANSWER: Practical Extraction and Report Language
Tossup Six. Venus curses him when he rejects divine graces. Wolfram reminds him that his singing had once charmed Elisabeth. In fulfillment of the conditions of his salvation, the Pope’s staff blossoms after his death. For 10 points—name this title character of an 1845 Wagner (VAHG-ner) opera.
ANSWER: Tannhäuser
BONUS. In January 1999, the music group Subset was formed by a rapper and the remnants of a defunct rock group. For 10 points each, answer the following about Subset.
• The rock component of Subset is former members of this band, which won moderate acclaim for its hits “Lump” and “Peaches”.
ANSWER: The Presidents of the United States of America [prompt on partial answer]
• The rap component is this artist, famous for “Baby Got Back”.
ANSWER: Sir Mix-A-Lot
• Both the Presidents and Mix-A-Lot hail from this west coast city.
ANSWER: Seattle
Tossup Seven. In early August, this country’s president, Nursultan Nazarbayev, fired Defense Minister Mukhtar Altynbayev and security chairman Nurtai Abykayev for their involvement in the sale of six MIG jet fighters. For 10 points—name this country, also home to two nuclear warheads, whose capital is at Alma-Alta or Almaty.
ANSWER: Kazakhstan
BONUS. Name these astronomical terms.
• For 5 points, this word describes the cutting off of light from one celestial body by another.
ANSWER: eclipse [accept occultation]
• For 10 points, this is the point in a geosynchronous orbit where the object is nearest to the earth.
ANSWER: perigee
• For 15 points, used to describe the reflective properties of a moon or planet, this term is defined as the fraction of light reflected from a surface.
ANSWER: albedo
Tossup Eight. Located on West Fifty-Seventh Street in New York, this building designed by William Burnett Tuthill opened with a May 5, 1891 concert conducted in part by Tchaikovsky. For 10 points—identify this structure named for the philanthropist who contributed two million dollars to its construction.
ANSWER: Carnegie Hall
BONUS. Answer these questions about the Lewis and Clark Expedition for 10 points each.
• Lewis and Clark reached the Pacific at the mouth of this river.
ANSWER: Columbia
• Name the North Dakota fort where the Corps of Discovery spent the winter of 1804-1805.
ANSWER: Fort Mandan
• Give was the name of Lewis and Clark’s fort at the mouth of the Columbia, where they spent the winter of 1805-1806.
ANSWER: Fort Clatsop
SCORE CHECK
Tossup Nine. Grandad loses the title object due to gambling debts, so he and Little Nell turn to begging, working in a puppet show, working in Mrs. Jarley’s Wax Works, and tending graves, before Little Nell dies. For 10 points—name this work by Charles Dickens whose title names s retail establishment.
ANSWER: The Old Curiosity Shop
BONUS. Identify these political slang terms from definitions for 15 points each.
• One legislator voting for the bill of another in return for the second legislator voting for a bill sponsored by the first.
ANSWER: logrolling
• An unneeded government expenditure, often used as make-work or to spark the economy by spending.
ANSWER: boondoggle
Tossup Ten. The spin of any boson equals this type of number times the fundamental angular momentum unit, while the spin of any fermion equals half of the same type of number times the FAMU. For 10 points—identify this type of number, described by one definition as all whole numbers and their opposites.
ANSWER: integers
BONUS. Answer these questions about these featured plays for 10 points each.
• In this play–Arthur Miller’s second–Chris wants to marry Ann, who is engaged to Chris’ oldest brother, who has been missing in action in World War II for three years.
ANSWER: All My Sons
• Joseph works with Lady Sneerwell to derail the courtship of his brother Charles, but fails when his wealthy uncle Oliver discovers the true nature of the brothers. Name this popular play by Richard Sheridan.
ANSWER: The School for Scandal
• In this Shakespearean history, the title character is imprisoned and murdered in the Pontefract (POM-fret) Castle following his overthrow.
ANSWER: Richard II
FINAL SCORE
Visual Handout for Bonus Attached to Related Tossup/Bonus Round Tossup Seven
|[pic] |[pic] |
|Figure A. |Figure B. |
Visual Handout for Bonus Attached to Related Tossup/Bonus Round Tossup Seven
|[pic] |[pic] |
|Figure A. |Figure B. |
Quarterfinals Category Quiz
Available Bonus Categories
American Literature: The 1900s
Biological Sciences: The 1910s
Dance: The 1920s
World Geography: The 1930s
Physical Sciences: The 1940s
Pop Culture: The 1950s
Religion, Mythology, and Philosophy: The 1960s
U.S. Culture: The 1970s
World History: The 1980s
World Literature: The 1990s
Quarterfinals Category Quiz
Available Bonus Categories
American Literature: The 1900s
Biological Sciences: The 1910s
Dance: The 1920s
World Geography: The 1930s
Physical Sciences: The 1940s
Pop Culture: The 1950s
Religion, Mythology, and Philosophy: The 1960s
U.S. Culture: The 1970s
World History: The 1980s
World Literature: The 1990s
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