2001 National Scholastics Championship——————————



——————————2001 National Scholastics Championship——————————

Round 10. Related Tossup/Bonus

01 His beautiful sister, Tirzah, and his mother are thrown in jail when they contract leprosy, though they are eventually cured. They had been imprisoned by Messala, who this man cripples, having earlier defeated Messala in a chariot race in Antioc. For 10 points—name this title character of a Lew Wallace novel.

ANSWER: Ben Hur

01 BONUS. The 1959 movie Ben Hur won 11 Academy Awards. 10 points each.

[10] Who played Ben Hur?

ANSWER: Charlton Heston or John Charlton Carter

[10] This director of Ben Hur won his third Best Director Oscar, following his wins for Mrs. Miniver and The Best Years of Our Lives.

ANSWER: William Wyler

02 Susie Becker determined that “all [she] needed to know [she] learned from” one of these, while Stephen Baker wrote about “how to live with a neurotic” one. Cleveland Amory had one “who came for Christmas.” For 10 points—T.S. Eliot wrote Old Possum’s Book about what “practical” creatures?

ANSWER: cats

02 BONUS. While a cat may wear a hat, name these things religious personages wear on their heads, 10 points each.

[10] This high-pointed hat is worn by bishops in the Greek Orthodox and Roman Catholic churches.

ANSWER: miter

[10] This is a small, round skullcap which may be worn by a Catholic bishop or cardinal.

ANSWER: zuchetto

03 This character is so passive that she advises her stepson, Harpo, to abuse his wife, Sofia. Raped at 14, she has two children by her stepfather, Alphonso. Beaten by her husband, Albert, she is empowered through an affair with her husband’s live-in lover, Shug Avery. For 10 points—name this protagonist of Alice Walker’s The Color Purple.

ANSWER: Celie

03 BONUS. Celie is a character in The Color Purple. Prince’s Purple Rain included the song “When Doves Cry.” Answer the following concerning Doves in literature, 10 points each.

[10] This poet lived in Dove Cottage in Grasmere, Westmorland in the Lake District. His poems include “The Solitary Reaper,” “London 1802,” and “The World Is Too Much with Us.”

ANSWER: William Wordsworth

[10] In 1993, Larry McMurtry wrote this novel, the sequel to his Pulitzer Prize-winning work, Lonesome Dove.

ANSWER: Streets of Laredo

04 The real-life inspiration for this composition was an Irish actress whose performances as Juliet and Ophelia at the Odeon Theater in Paris deeply moved its composer. For 10 points—name this five-movement musical work in which the actress is transformed into a witch in an opium-induced sleep of our “artist”, through the use of an idée fixe [ee-DAY feeks], created by Hector Berlioz.

ANSWER: Symphonie Fantastique or Fantastic Symphony by Hector Berlioz

04 BONUS. Celebrations have begun and will continue to 2003, the bicentenary of Berlioz’s birth. Answer these questions regarding Berlioz for ten points each.

[10] The ninth section of this ten-movement 1837 choral work is notable for the repeated choral figure over an ever-varying orchestral accompaniment in the Offertoire features a solo tenor in which the “Sanctus” is followed by “Hosanna.”

ANSWER: Requiem or Grande Messe des Morts or Great Mass for the Dead

[10] In 1867, this Realist painter of The Peasants at Flagey, The Burial at Ornans and The Stone Breakers created a portrait of Berlioz.

ANSWER: Gustave Courbet [koor-BAY]

05 Her mom is easily enamored with another man who convinces her to mortgage the family house. Her exclusive interview with Elena Rossini for Good Afternoon! got her career back on track after the horrible fireman’s pole incident. For 10 points—name this British fictional singleton created by Helen Fielding.

ANSWER: Bridget or Bridget Jones [the clues are from the first book, not the movie]

05 BONUS. Name these fictional characters from other epistolary-style novels, 10 points each.

[10] This title character opines to his friend Wilhelm about his obsession with 19-year-old Charlotte, who is engaged to 30-year-old Albert.

ANSWER: (Young) Werther

[10] This Samuel Richardson heroine is drugged and exploited by Robert Lovelace. Eventually she dies.

ANSWER: Clarissa or Clarissa Harlowe

06 His 1938 graduate thesis established the conditions under which mathematical systems are logically “complete.” After a stint as a cryptographer at Blechley Park during World War II, he proposed a rejected design for an “automated computing engine” more powerful than any of its early rivals. Name this British mathematician—for 10 points—most famous for suggesting a test to determine if computers “think.”

ANSWER: Alan Mathison Turing [Gödel does not fit the facts]

06 BONUS. Name these terms related to “logical” concepts in mathematics, 10 points each.

[10] In programming, these variables are constrained to have values of “true” or “false,” though the specific numerical values vary between languages.

ANSWER: boolean

[10] This term describes any function which can be represented as the quotient of two polynomials.

ANSWER: rational function

07 He is sometimes identified as Amraphel of Shinar, mentioned in Genesis, chapter 14. He desired to be known and remembered as the “King of Righteousness,” which can be found in the prologue to his greatest work. For 10 points—name this man who believed in a stratified class-based society, protection for the weak, and uniform justice in his Babylonian code of law.

ANSWER: Hammurabi

07 BONUS. Identify the following concerning law, for ten points each.

[10] This law code was compiled by a Frankish people who conquered Gaul in the 5th century AD. It includes a law banning daughters from inheriting land, which was used to determine monarchical successions in Europe.

ANSWER: Salic law [From the Salian Franks]

[10] This author of De Jure Belli ac Pacis and Mare Liberum held such political posts as Swedish ambassador to Paris and attorney general of Holland, and is called the father of modern international law.

ANSWER: Hugo Grotius [GROW-tee-us]

08 Martin R. Dalaney left in 1848 after a year, and William C. Nell resigned in 1851 because of political differences. Founded on December 3, 1847 in Rochester, New York, it existed for thirteen years, including taking on the name of its founder in 1851 upon its merger with the Liberty Party Paper. For 10 points—name this publication named after a guide for runaway slaves, published by Frederick Douglass.

ANSWER: The North Star

08 BONUS. Minnesota is sometimes called ‘the North Star State.” 10 points each.

[10] Minnesota contains this lake, near Bemidji, which is considered the main source of the Mississippi River.

ANSWER: Lake Itasca

[10] This city, Minnesota’s fourth most populous, lies on the banks of the St. Louis River, opposite Superior, Wisconsin on Lake Superior.

ANSWER: Duluth

09 Highlands, Glades, and Hendry lie to the west; Martin lies to the north. Completely engulfing Clear Lake and Lake Mangonia, its 1999 population was estimated at just over one million, principally in the town of the same name and its larger, western neighbor. For 10 points—name this Florida county whose shores have gathered less press than its ballots.

ANSWER: Palm Beach County

09 BONUS. The Palm Beach Story starred Claudette Colbert. Answer the following about Jean-Baptiste Colbert, 10 points each.

[10] Colbert handled the personal finances of this chief minister, who recommended his services to Louis XIV.

ANSWER: Jules Cardinal Mazarin or Guilio Mazarini

[10] In 1663, Colbert abolished the Company of One Hundred Associates, turning rule of this colony over from a company to a governor-general in Québec.

ANSWER: New France or la Nouvelle France

10 The solution of the Schrödinger equation for a particle with this type of potential is given by the product of a Gaussian function and a Hermite potential. The mean displacement of a quantum one is zero, just like its classical analogue. Though quadratic and quartic versions exist, simple ones obey Hooke’s law. For 10 points—name this mechanical model in which a particle’s vibrations can be described in terms of sine and cosine functions, the simplest example of which is a spring..

ANSWER: harmonic oscillator [accept SHM or simple harmonic motion]

10 BONUS. Answer the following questions about harmonic motion, 10 points each.

[10] Hooke’s law defines this fundamental quantity of an oscillator, describing the force required to achieve a unit displacement in the loose end of a spring fixed at one end.

ANSWER: force constant [prompt on k or κ (kappa)]

[10] This term refers to harmonic motion in which frictional forces cause the amplitude of an oscillator to slowly decay.

ANSWER: damping or damped harmonic motion

Allow substitutions if any. THEN distribute handout with Category Quiz topics, as you read the categories:

American History: Cause of a Curse?

American Literature: Famous Lines

Entertainment & Sports: Duo Debuts

Fine Arts: True Love?

General Knowledge & Trivia: Shocking Developments

Geography: Bodies of Water

Mathematics: The AHSME [ASH-me]

Physical Sciences: Things that Slow Computers Down

Religion, Mythology, & Philosophy: If I Ever Lose My Faith in You

World History: Yours to Discover

——————————2001 National Scholastics Championship——————————

Round 10. Category Quiz Tossups

11 Agreements reached here included the system for the four-zone occupation of Germany, the outlawing of the Nazi Party, and the redistribution of territory among Germany, the USSR, and Poland. The nations involved Issued a joint declaration on July 26 declaring that Japan would surrender or be destroyed. Clement Attlee replaced Churchill mid-conference, joining Truman and Stalin. For 10 points, name this 1945 meeting in Germany.

ANSWER: Potsdam Conference

12 A pattern is drawn with an applicator called a tjanting, or with a copper stamp called a tjap. The fabric is then dyed, and, after drying, scraped or boiled to remove the wax. The process is repeated for each color. For ten points, name this wax-resistant dyeing process which originated in Java.

ANSWER: batik

13 A student of Gauss at Göttingen, and Dirichlet [DEE-reech-lay] at Berlin, in his doctoral thesis, he described the conditions needed for a function to be integrable. A famous unsolved problem lies in finding the roots of his zeta function. For 10 points—name this German mathematician, who invented a non-Euclidean geometry, whose “sums” are taught to calculus students as a method of numerical approximation of an integral.

ANSWER: Georg Friedrich Bernhard Riemann

14 Considered the place where the Fifth Sun was born, its name means “place where one is deified.” It is divided into four quadrants by the crossing avenues the Street of the Dead and the East West Avenue. Known for structures such as the Pyramid of the Dead, for ten points, name this archaeological site, thirty miles northeast of Mexico City.

ANSWER: Teotihuacan

15 He governed the region of Egypt for the Ottoman Empire before declaring semi-independence in the 1840’s. He was noted for his lavish lifestyle and financial expenditures toward the building of the Suez Canal. For ten points, identify this ruler who precipitated the British colonization of Egypt.

ANSWER: Muhammed Ali

16 It wasn’t until the second edition of 1861 that this work included the section entitled Tableux parisiens. The final sections are Révolte and La Mort, in which the poet longs for death. It has a theme of man’s conflict between the spleen and idéal, good and evil. For ten points, name this work, deemed immoral by the French government, written by Baudelaire.

ANSWER: Les Fleurs du mal or The Flowers of Evil

17 A dead one is one which has been used so long and is now so common that the discrepancy between vehicle and tenor is no longer one of which we are aware. According to I.A. Richards, the tenor is the subject to which it is applied, and the vehicle is the term itself. For ten points, name this literary term which, when two or more diverse vehicles are combined, sometimes ludicrously, is referred to as "mixed."

ANSWER: metaphor

18 This term has been used to describe people who leave monastic or clerical orders without permission. In the third century, it was used to label those expelled from the Roman Catholic Church as part of the Donatist controversy. In the fourth century, it was used as an appelation for the Roman Emperor Julian, who converted from Christianity to paganism. For ten points, name this label which can be applied to anyone who publicly rejects a faith after originally accepting it.

ANSWER: apostate (accept apostasy)

——————————2001 National Scholastics Championship——————————

Round 10. The Category Quiz

American History: Cause of a Curse?

This 1813 battle solidified US control of the Northwest and helped bring William Henry Harrison into the national spotlight. For 15 points—in what battle was the Shawnee leader Tecumseh killed?

ANSWER: Battle of the Thames or Moraviantown

American Literature: Famous Lines

For 15 points—“You may write me down in history with your bitter, twisted lies/You may trod me in the very dirt/But still, like air-“ I will do what, according to the title of a Maya Angelou poem?

ANSWER: “Still I Rise”

Entertainment & Sports: Duo Debuts

They have appeared together in five films, but—for 15 points—what was the first film in which both Matt Damon and Ben Affleck appeared?

ANSWER: School Ties

Fine Arts: True Love?

The painting shows influences from the artist’s visit to the Byzantine mosaics in Ravenna: the yellow garb of the central figures has colored patches, and the background is a mottled, textured brown. Celebrating the artist’s deeply-held belief in idealized love, it is one of the painter’s only works to survive the Nazis. For 15 points—name this painting by Gustav Klimt.

ANSWER: The Kiss

General Knowledge & Trivia: Shocking Developments

When Thomas Edison was asked to consult on the development of the electric chair in New York, he saw an opportunity to advance his DC form of electricity over the rival AC form, by insisting that the electric chair use an AC generator. For 15 points—what inventor of the AC form of electricity was Edison trying to so discredit?

ANSWER: George Westinghouse, Jr.

Geography: Bodies of Water

They take their name from an American aviator who crashed nearby in the 1930s. For 15 points—name this body of water formed when the Rio Churun spills over the plateau of Auyan Tepui, or Devil Mountain.

ANSWER: Angel Falls

Mathematics: The AHSME

Pencil and paper ready. On the 30-question American High School Mathematics Exam, each correct answer is worth five points; each question left blank is worth two points; wrong answers are worth nothing. Three people earned the same score, though each had a different number of correct answers. For 15 points—what is the largest number of correct answers any of them could have had? You have 30 seconds.

ANSWER: 24 [The three students had 24 right, 0 blank; 22 right, 5 blank; and 20 right, 10 blank.]

Physical Sciences: Things that Slow Computers Down

Because numbers with decimal components require more memory than simple integers, operations involving them are slower than those involving integers alone. For 15 points—what name is given to those mathematical operations carried out by a computer that involve decimal numbers rather than integers?

ANSWER: floating-point operations [prompt on “flops”]

Religion, Mythology, & Philosophy: If I Ever Lose My Faith in You

According to Canon law, it is still punishable by excommunication. For 15 points—what is the term for complete rejection of Christianity by a baptized person who once professed the faith?

ANSWER: apostasy or apostate [accept word forms; do not accept “heresy”]

World History: Yours to Discover

Its license plates bear the motto “Yours to Discover.” For 15 points—name this Canadian province, the site of the French Fort Frontenac, first explored by Étienne Brûlé [ay-TEE-en broo-LAY] in 1610.

ANSWER: Ontario [HN: Québec’s license plates say “Je me souviens”-“I remember.”]

——————————2001 National Scholastics Championship——————————

Round 10. Stretch Round

19 The classic example of this concept involves a group of hands working a field. The first hand hired causes a great increase in productivity, but as successive people are added they contribute less and less. FOR TEN POINTS name this economic law caused by the concept of decreasing marginal utility.

ANSWER: Law of Diminishing Returns (accept Decreasing Marginal Utility before it is mentioned

19 BONUS. Given the number of a Beethoven symphony, provide its commonly accepted nickname.

a. 3rd

ANSWER: Eroica

b. 6th

ANSWER: Pastorale

c. 9th

ANSWER: Chorale

20 In most patients, this enterovirus causes minor cold and flu-like symptoms. In less than one-fifth of patients, however, it diffuses into the central nervous system, where it destroys nerve cells in the anterior horn of the spinal cord. Once so feared that mother’s wouldn’t let their children go swimming—FOR TEN POINTS—name this virus controlled by vaccines developed by Salk and Sabin.

ANSWER: poliomyelitis [accept infantile paralysis]

20 BONUS. Identify these poems associated with the American Civil War, for ten points each.

This John Greenleaf Whitter poem concerns a woman who supposedly defied Stonewall Jackson's troops in Frederick, Maryland.

ANSWER: "Barbara Frietchie"

"Row after row with strict impunity/ The headstones yield their names to the element,/ The wind whirrs without recollection." So begins what 1928 poem by Allen Tate?

ANSWER: "Ode to the Confederate Dead"

After publication in The Atlantic Monthly in 1862, this Julia Ward Howe poem became a popular song of the Civil War.

ANSWER: "Battle-Hymn of the Republic"

21 [blank], a Spanish immigrant will assume leadership of this party after the now failed stewardship of William Hague. For ten points, name this British political party, which for the second straight election lost in a landslide to Tony Blair’s Labour Partry.

ANSWER: Tory or Conservative

21 BONUS. Answer the following questions related to a particular Old Testament prophet, ten points each.

This prophet's shouting match with the prophets of Baal did not earn him many points with King Ahab.

ANSWER: Elijah

Ahab and Elijah clash again when Ahab orders this man executed, so that Ahab can seize his vineyard.

ANSWER: Naboth

This friend and supporter of Elijah shares his name with the minor prophet whose book is the shortest of the Old Testament.

ANSWER: Obadiah

22 “In heaven all the interesting people are missing.” “We talk so abstractly about poetry, because we are all bad poets. “There are no moral phenomena at all, but only a moral interpretation of phenomena.” FOR TEN POINTS, what philosopher wrote these phrases in, respectively, The Will to Power, The Birth of Tragedy, and Beyond Good and Evil.

ANSWER: Friedrich Nietzsche

22 BONUS. Given arias or scenes from an opera, identify the opera from which they come, ten points each.

“La donna è mobile”

ANSWER: Rigoletto by Giuseppe Verdi

The “Champagne Aria” and the Masquerade Ball scene

ANSWER: Don Giovanni by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

The “Coronation Scene,” the scene in Kromy Forest, and the “St. Basil Scene”

ANSWER: Boris Godunov [ba REES guh DOO nuff] by Modest Mussorgsky

23 Though he returned to his homeland of Russia in 1936, he lived in Paris for almost 20 years in an effort to escape the Communists. His “Classical” Symphony and Scythian Suite premiered during World War I. FOR TEN POINTS, name this composer of “Love For Three Oranges” and “Peter and the Wolf”.

ANSWER: Sergei Sergeyevich Prokoviev

23 BONUS. Identify the following Latin American leaders for the stated number of points.

For 15 points: This son of a German immigrant rose through his country's military ranks to become president of Paraguay following a 1954 coup. He was finally overthrown in 1989.

ANSWER: Alfredo Stroessner

For 5 points: After overthrowing Salvador Allende in 1973, he headed Chile's military government until 1990.

ANSWER: Augusto Ugarte Pinochet

For 10 points: In 1989, he became the first Peronist to be elected president of Argentina since Juan Peron himself in 1973. He led Argentina from 1989 to 1999.

ANSWER: Carlos Menem

24 This dynasty introduced a literacy test for those claming a religious exemption to the draft, which led to Ch’an Buddhism’s formulation of the koans. Emperor Jen-tsung reinstated the civil service exams, and dialogues between representatives of major religions took place at court, but a popular feeling of disconnectedness from the rulers persisted. FOR TEN POINTS, identify this dynasty which ruled China after the Sung, known to its leaders as the Great Khanate.

ANSWER: Yuan dynasty [accept Mongol dynasty]

24 BONUS. For fifteen points each, answer questions based on the following monologue.

“Humans, lions, eagles, quail, you horned deer, you wild geese, you spiders, and you wordless fish who swim beneath the wave, starfish, stars in heaven so distant that the human eyes cannot see them, all living things, all, all, all, . . . all living things have ended their allotted rounds and are no more. For more than a thousand years, the earth has been lifeless, no single living creature yet remains. And the weary moon in heaven lights her lamp in vain. The cranes in the meadows awake no more, their cries are silent; the flight of beetles in the linden woods is stilled.”

This monologue begins Konstantin’s symbolic play in what Chekhov play?

ANSWER: The Seagull: A Comedy in Four Acts or Chaika

For another fifteen points, give the first name of the character in The Seagull whose career as an actress began at age 19 performing these lines.

ANSWER: Nina Mikhailovna Zarechnaya

25 This country, with forests in the southwest and arid, desert-like land through the rest the westernmost in Africa is a low-lying country. Slave ships would often depart from this country’s infamous Isle de Gorée for the New World. FOR TEN POINTS, name this former French country which surrounds Gambia and whose capital is Dakar.

ANSWER: Senegal

25 BONUS. Hesiod mentions three female Titans in his Theogeny. FTPE:

a. This wife of Oceanus was the mother of all river gods.

ANSWER: Tethys

b. This wife and sister of Cronus was the mother of Zeus, Demeter, Poseidon, and Hestia. Thanks to her, Zeus was able to live to overthrow Cronus.

ANSWER: Rhea

c. The first patroness of the Delphic oracle, this early earth goddess survived as a goddess of natural law.

ANSWER: Themis

26 Joachim Ziemssen’s cousin, Hans Castorp, discovers he has a small pulmonary defect and enters a sanatorium. In his seven years at the sanatorium, this book’s protagonist meets the rational physician Dr. Behrens and his spiritualistic assistant Dr. Krokowski. FOR TEN POINTS, name this 1924 Bildungsroman set just before World War I in the Swiss Alps by Thomas Mann.

ANSWER: The Magic Mountain or Der Zauberberg by Thomas Mann

26 BONUS. Answer the following about the high gas prices plaguing the US for ten points each.

a. Many blame the addition of this corn byproduct to gasoline for higher gas prices in the Midwest.

ANSWER: Ethanol

b. This fuel additive is supposed to increase gas mileage, but short supplies have slowed oil refineries attempts to match summer demand.

ANSWER: MTBE

c. This California governor refuses to accept any blame for the current energy situation in the state.

ANSWER: Gray Davis

27 In physics, types of them include Lie and Clifford; they can be variously defined on groups, rings, and fields. Although originally described by Diophantus of Alexandria, their formal development was codified by the French mathematicians Viète and Descartes. The linear branch of this subject generalizes it to spaces of higher dimensions. Name, FOR TEN POINTS, this mathematical branch which applies addition and multiplication to variables rather than numbers.

ANSWER: algebra(s)

27 BONUS. Answer the following as pertains to an American author, for ten points each.

The title character of this work is first employed by the Harling family then for Wick Cutter. Impregnated by Larry Donovan, she gives birth to a daughter, and eventually marries a Bohemian named Cuzak in rural Nebraska.

ANSWER: My Antonia

Name the author of My Antonia.

ANSWER: Willa Cather

Doctor Burleigh tells the title character, an elderly farmer, to take it easy because of his heart and his age in this Willa Cather short story. He dies after finding out that his daughter-in-law, Polly, is sweet at heart.

ANSWER: “Neighbour Rosicky”

28 Tonio expresses his adoration for Nedda, Canio’s wife, while Canio is out for a drink. Nedda, however, plans to run away with Sylvio. Canio finds out and becomes angry with his wife; he then expresses distress over having to suppress his grief and play the clown in the commedia dell’arte that night. FOR TEN POINTS —name this 1892 opera in which art imitates life a little too closely for Canio’s taste, by Leoncavallo.

ANSWER: Pagliacci or Clowns [accept I Pagliacci]

28 BONUS. Identify the following unusual events in Native American history, for ten points each.

More than two thousand colonists were killed and all but three British outposts west of the Appalachians were destroyed in 1763 by a force of Native Americans led by this Ottawa chieftain.

ANSWER: Pontiac

In this 1832 case, Chief Justice John Marshall ruled that the Cherokee nation was sovereign, and could not have state laws enforced on its territory. Famously, President Andrew Jackson refused to enforce this decision.

ANSWER: Worcester v. Georgia

In 1861, the Confederacy allowed this group, consisting of the Choctaws, Chickasaws, Creeks, Seminoles, and Cherokees, to send delegates to the Confederate Congress.

ANSWER: Five Civilized Nations

Opening Round: Related Tossup-Bonus Section

In this round, each tossup question is worth 10 points. Upon getting the tossup question correct, a team question worth a maximum of 20 points will be read. The topic for the bonus question will somehow be related to the tossup question. Both teams get an opportunity to answer after each prompted section of a bonus question, with the team getting the preceding tossup getting the first opportunity.

Category Quiz

In this round, each tossup question is worth 10 points. Upon getting the tossup question correct, the team gets the opportunity to choose a 15-point team question based on the list of topics handed out before the round. If the bonus question is missed, the opposing team gets the opportunity to answer.

Stretch Round: Unrelated Tossups and Bonuses

In this round, each tossup question is worth 20 points until the reader completes the phrase “for ten points,” after which the tossup is worth 10. Upon getting the tossup question correct, the team gets the opportunity to choose answer the associated bonus question for a maximum value of 30 points. Both teams get an opportunity to answer after each prompted section of a bonus question, with the team getting the preceding tossup getting the first opportunity.

Category Quiz Bonus Topics: Round 10

American History: Cause of a Curse?

American Literature: Famous Lines

Entertainment & Sports: Duo Debuts

Fine Arts: True Love?

General Knowledge & Trivia: Shocking Developments

Geography: Bodies of Water

Mathematics: The AHSME

Physical Sciences: Things that Slow Computers Down

Religion, Mythology, & Philosophy: If I Ever Lose My Faith in You

World History: Yours to Discover

Category Quiz Bonus Topics: Round 10

American History: Cause of a Curse?

American Literature: Famous Lines

Entertainment & Sports: Duo Debuts

Fine Arts: True Love?

General Knowledge & Trivia: Shocking Developments

Geography: Bodies of Water

Mathematics: The AHSME

Physical Sciences: Things that Slow Computers Down

Religion, Mythology, & Philosophy: If I Ever Lose My Faith in You

World History: Yours to Discover

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