Round 2page 1/5
Round 1: Letter Category [± 10 points, no bounce-back]
In this round, all answers begin with the letter B.
1. Red, claylike, and earthy, this mineral is the primary source of aluminum and its compounds.
Answer: Bauxite
2. This city on the Caspian Sea is the capital of Azerbaijan.
Answer: Baku
3. Dmitry, Ivan, Alyosha, and Smerdyakov are the four sons of Fyodor in this novel by Dostoyevsky.
Answer: The Brothers Karamazov
4. An undercover CIA agent working to expose SD-6, this “Alias” character is played by Jennifer Garner.
Answer: Sydney Bristow
5. A painter for the Medici family and illustrator for Dante, his works include The Primavera and The Birth of Venus.
Answer: Sandro Botticelli
6. This Revolutionary liberated much of South America from Spanish rule.
Answer: Simón Bolívar
7. Of family Crucifera in order Capparales, it is a variety of cabbage grown for the edible immature flowers; it’s rumored that George Bush the elder banned it from Air Force One.
Answer: Broccoli
8. Set in the year 632 After Ford, this is a dystopian novel by Aldous Huxley.
Answer: Brave New World
Round 2: Untimed Individual [+20, -0; max 140 points, 5 seconds per answer]
Team 1:
1. When will Maryland play in the Rose Bowl? – 2006 is the answer, but the question also contains what name of the Greek god of love?
Answer: Eros
2. ESTRAY, ETHOS, ETUDE—Which of these three words refers to the disposition, character, or fundamental values of a person?
Answer: ETHOS
3. Dallas, Houston, El Paso – place these Texas cities in order from east to west.
Answer: Houston, Dallas, El Paso (2,1,3)
4. (two part question) The same year, 1769, saw this man patent his steam engine and also saw this estate of Thomas Jefferson built.
Answers: James Watt and Monticello
5. Samuel Clemens, Theodore Geisel, George Russell – Which of these is the actual name of author Mark Twain?
Answer: Samuel Clemens (1)
6. “But she named the infant ‘Pearl,’ as being of great price – purchased with all she had – her mother’s only pleasure.” Nathaniel Hawthorne wrote this line in what novel?
Answer: The Scarlet Letter
Team 2:
1. When do the Ravens play? – This question contains the name of the queen of the Olympian gods, the daughter of Kronos and Rhea.
Answer: Hera
2. ELUCIDATE, ELUDE, ELUTE—Which of these three words means “to make clear or plain?”
Answer: ELUCIDATE
3. Fresno, Sacramento, Bakersfield – place these California cities in order from north to south.
Answer: Sacramento, Fresno, Bakersfield (2,1,3)
4. (two part question) The same day, April 15, in 1912 saw this unsinkable ship hit an iceberg and sink, and in 1865 saw this man die after he was shot while watching Our American Cousin.
Answers: R.M.S. Titanic and Abraham Lincoln
5. Ode to a Nightingale, Ode to Duty, Ode to the West Wind – Which of these poems was written by John Keats?
Answer: Ode to a Nightingale (1)
6. “You can’t eat the orange and throw the peel away—a man is not a piece of fruit.” Willy Loman says this to Howard when he feels like Howard had gone back on the word of his father in which Arthur Miller work?
Answer: Death of a Salesman
Round 3: Category Round [± 10 points, no bounce-back]
Rock ‘n roll, dudes, with this category round about stony things.
1. This type of stone is in a Bob Dylan song and in the name of the self-proclaimed Greatest Rock n Roll Band in the World.
ANSWER: rolling stone
2. This stone was used in the coronation ceremonies of Scottish kings.
ANSWER: Stone of Scone
3. Corundum is 9 and talc is 1 on this hardness scale.
ANSWER: Moh‘s hardness scale
4. The world’s largest relief carving, featuring three Confederate leaders, is found at Stone Mountain 15 miles east of this large Georgia city.
ANSWER: Atlanta
5. The Greek word for stone is integrated into this element used in its carbonate form to treat depression and bipolar disorder.
ANSWER: lithium
6. This liberal Minnesota Senator was killed in a plane crash in October.
ANSWER: Paul Wellstone
7. This mysterious collection of monoliths is located on Salisbury Plain.
ANSWER: Stonehenge
8. This electrical structure, named for a 19th century Englishman, is used to measure unknown resistances in a circuit.
ANSWER: Wheatstone bridge
9. This woman authored The Autobiography of Alice B. Tocklas.
ANSWER: Gertrude Stein
10. The Turning Stone Casino in New York is operated by this Iroquois nation, also the name of a nearby lake.
ANSWER: Oneida
Round 4: Timed Individual [+20, -0, bonus 25 for all correct; max 185 points, 90 seconds total]
Team 1:
1. Ernest Lawrence and Stanley Livingston developed it while at Berkeley. Name this device that creates electric and magnetic fields in a D-shaped chamber and is used to study atomic structure.
Answer: Cyclotron
2. Deeply influenced by Palladio, he introduced the classical architecture of Italy to Britain. Name this English architect who restored the old St. Paul’s and designed the Banqueting House in Whitehall.
Answer: Inigo Jones
3. His novel The Moon and Sixpence is largely based on the life of artist Paul Gauguin. Known for his straightforward style, name this author who wrote Of Human Bondage.
Answer: W. Somerset Maugham
4. Calculate the y-intercept of the straight line shown [graph with line segment between (3,0) and (4, 2)]
Answer: –6
5. Serving on the Archaeological Survey of Egypt, he assisted Sir Flinders Petrie in the excavation at Tall al Amarinah. Name this Egyptologist most famous for discovering the tomb of King Tutankhamun.
Answer: Howard Carter
6. Electric gnats, Glowworms, Lightning bugs-- Which of these is not another name for a firefly?
Answer: Electric Gnat (1)
7. The seat of Fayette County, this city is the home of the University of Kentucky, and is the most populous in the state.
Answer: Lexington
8. “If you come to a fork in the road, take it.” What famous Yankee catcher once said this?
Answer: Yogi Berra
Team 2:
1. Born in Germany, he disproved the existence of ether and became the first U.S. citizen to win a Nobel Prize. Name this scientist who together with Edward Morley invented the interferometer.
Answer: Albert Michelson
2. In this famous Renaissance piece, Plato, Aristotle, and Socrates are shown debating the great matters of their day in the titular venue. Name this renowned painting of Raphael.
Answer: The School of Athens
3. Born Mary Ann Evans, her liaison with George Lewes scandalized England and reflected her own rebellion against conservative religion. Identify this author who penned Silas Marner and Middlemarch.
Answer: George Eliot
4. Calculate the y-intercept of the straight line shown [graph with line segment between (2,4) and (8,10)]
Answer: 2
5. He immigrated to the United States in 1863 and joined the Cigar Maker’s International Union a year later. Identify this union leader who united labor organizations under the American Federation of Labor.
Answer: Samuel Gompers
6. Bandicoot, Kangaroo, Koala-- Which of these marsupials lives in trees?
Answer: Koala (3)
7. The seat of Mecklenburg County, this largest city of North Carolina is home to the new Continental Tire Bowl.
Answer: Charlotte
8. “You miss 100 percent of the shots you never take.” So take a shot at who said this. He had his number, 99, retired by the NHL.
Answer: Wayne Gretzky
Round 5: Grab Bag [15 questions, ±20 points, no bounce-back]
1. This baroque piece consists of two parts; the first, showy and dynamic, is intended to display the musician's virtuosity; the second, a polyphonic piece based around a single theme. Name this first song in the movie Fantasia, an organ composition by J. S. Bach.
Answer: Toccata and Fuguein D minor
2. In 490 BC, the underdog Athenians defeated an invasion by the Persian army in this battle which occurred on a famous plain, resulting in a messenger running over twenty-five miles with the news. Name this battle, eponym of popular endurance races.
Answer: Battle ofMarathon
3. What is the theorem, discovered by Pascal and Leibniz, that states both the relationship between definite and indefinite integrals and the relationship between derivatives and integrals?
Answer: Fundamental Theorem of Calculus
4. Originally called animalcules, later a phylum of animalia, this subdivision of the protista includes the more animal-like unicellular eukaryotes, such as paramecia and amoeba.
Answer: Protozoan
5. This "capital" game is a common motif in Celtic folklore. Sir Caradoc was challenged to it; Cu Roi played against Cuchullain; and Sir Gawain nearly lost against the Green Knight. What is this adventure, named for the non-fatal decapitation incurred.
Answer: theBeheadinggame
6. The first appeared in 1913 in the New York World. These days, the New York Times’ is most famous, edited by the world's only enigmatologist, Will Shortz. What are these word puzzles, where clues hint at how to place overlapping words in a grid?
Answer: Crosswordpuzzle
7. Sometimes said to have begun the Graveyard School of poetry, what is this poem, which includes the phrase "far from the madding crowd" and begins "the curfew tolls the knell of parting day." written by Thomas Gray?
Answer: Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard
8. Name the general type of mathematical curve, including lines, circles, ellipses, parabolas and hyperbolas, formed by the intersection of a plane and a full cone.
Answer: Conicsection
9. He was born in Urbino, and later studied painting under Perugino, before moving to Florence and then Rome where he painted frescoes for Pope Julius II and was made chief architect of St. Peter's Basilica by Julius's successor Leo X. Name this painter of "The Sistine Madonna" and "The School of Athens".
Answer: Raphael or Raffaello Sanzio
10. The Banqueters, The Thesmophorians, The Knights, Peace, and The Acharnians were all written by what greatest comic playwright of classical Greece, also the author of The Wasps, The Clouds, The Birds, and Lysistrata?
Answer: Aristophanes
11. Sir Joseph Porter ends up with his cousin Hebe. Ralph marries Josephine, and Corcoran marries Little Buttercup. This all takes place in or around what ship, also the title of the operetta by Gilbert and Sullivan?
Answer: HMS Pinafore
12. It was first deciphered by Georg Grotefend and Henry Rawlinson, working with late Persian inscriptions. Tablets written in this pictographic and syllabic script have been found in such cities as Nippur and Ur. Name this "wedge-shaped" writing system used in ancient Mesopotamia.
Answer: Cuneiform
13. If you take out the even numbers and leave the odd, you get Sierpinski's Triangle. If you take the sums of diagonal rows, you get the Fibonacci Sequence. If you take the numbers in the nth row, you get the coefficients of the n-1 binomial expansion. Name this figure, every number in which is the sum of the two numbers above it.
Answer: Pascal's Triangle
14. The son of Meliodus, King of Lyoness, he slew the giant Morhaus of Ireland, whose sister he later delivered to his Uncle Mark of Corwall. Unfortunately, on the way home they accidentally drank a love potion. Name this hero, subject of a Wagner opera and lover of Isolde.
Answer: Tristan or Tristram or Drustan (prompt on anything that sounds similar)
15. He married Elizabeth of York, daughter of King Edward the fourth, and won the English crown at the Battle of Bosworth. Name this first Tudor monarch, the father of Henry VIII.
Answer: Henry VII
ex. A Prussian army, under Marshal Blücher, and a coalition of Belgian, Dutch, French, and British troops commanded by the Duke of Wellington fought together in this 1815 battle, the final defeat of Napoleon Bonaparte.
Answer: Battle ofWaterloo
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