Round 10

Related Tossup/Bonus Phase

Tossup 1. This man and his brother plotted and failed to dispose Harold Harefoot but failed, and they were exiled to Normandy. After a fight between the people of Dover and Eustace II, this man exiled his father-in-law Godwin with the support of Leofric of Mercia. His reign began in 1042 with the death of Harthacanute but he was not crowned until the following year. For 10 Points, identify this penultimate Anglo-Saxon King of England and son of Ethelred the Unready who founded Westminster Abbey and was canonized in 1161.

ANSWER: Edward the Confessor[Prompt on Edward III]

BONUS: Fought nine years before the Battle of Mantinea, this battle took place in a village in Boeotia.

[10] Name this 371 BC engagement that was a decisive defeat of the Spartans under Cleombrotus I.

ANSWER: Battle of Leuctra

[10] The Spartans at Leuctra were defeated by forces led by Epaminondas from what other city that was destroyed in 338 BC by Philip II?

ANSWER: Thebes

Tossup 2. Extinct classes of this phylum include Pelmatozoa and Blastozoa, the latter of which are often called sea buds. They possess a unique water vascular system and an open circulatory vessel with five vessels but no heart. Their larvae are bilaterally symmetric, but one side of the body gradually evolves and absorbs the other. Some of the living classes of the phylum are Homalozoa, Crinozoa, and Asterozoa. For 10 points, identify this phylum whose name means “spiny skin” and includes starfish and sea urchins.

ANSWER: Echinoderms [Echinodermata]

BONUS: Name some scientific thought experiments, for ten points each.

[10] Developed to illustrate the problems of the Copenhagen interpretation, this experiment by the creator of the wave equation says that until we look inside the box, the titular animal is simultaneously dead and alive.

ANSWER: Schrodinger’s Cat

[10] Envisioned by a French mathematician, if this entity knew the exact location and momentum of every particle in the universe at a single point in time, then it could reveal the entire future.

ANSWER: Laplace’s Demon

Tossup 3. One of his earlier works shows a flower being removed from a head, though the painting is titled The Extraction of the Stone of Madness. He painted an allegory entitled The Ship of Fools, as well as a tabletop of circular images entitled The Seven Deadly Sins and the Four Last Things. Only 25 works are definitely attributable to him, many of which were owned by Philip II of Spain, including a triptych depicting paradise and hell. For 10 points, identify this mysterious Dutch painter of The Garden of Earthly Delights.

ANSWER: Hieronymus Bosch

BONUS: It depicts a house located in Cushing, Maine, and a girl lying on the ground due to muscular dystrophy.

[10] Name this 1948 painting which shows a barn and a building known as the Olson house.

ANSWER: Christina’s World

[10] This American artist painted Christina’s World. He also painted 247 studies of Helga Testorf, and the BrandywineRiverMuseum and FarnsworthArt Museum have among the largest collections of his art.

ANSWER: Andrew Wyeth

Tossup 4. To create the illusion that he had double the number of men he actually did, he had his forces march out twice successively during the August 1812 Siege of Detroit, in which he commanded alongside Isaac Brock. His attempt to seek out allies in the South led to a civil war among the Creeks, and, in his absence, his younger brother failed to stop William Henry Harrison’s forces at the Battle of Tippecanoe. The Battle of the Thames was, for 10 points, the site of the death of whatShawnee chief?

ANSWER: Tecumseh

BONUS: Though he instituted free-market rules, the Rettig Report concluded that over 2000 people were killed on his orders. For ten point each:

[10] Name this dictator who ruled Chile from 1973 to 1990.

ANSWER: Augusto Pinochet

[10] Pinochet led the armed forces in a coup d’etat, which prompted this socialist president to commit suicide while the presidential palace of La Moneda was shelled.

ANSWER: SalvadorAllende

Tossup 5. He rejected what is now known as his namesake equivalence, which argued that demand would be affected equally by a raise in taxes as by an increase in government debt. He articulated the law of diminishing returns in an essay relating the value of stocks to the price of corn, and, after arguing for the repeal of the Corn Laws, he formulated the idea of comparative advantage. This is, for 10 points, what British economist, best known for writing On the Principles of Political Economy and Taxation and for formulating the Iron Law of Wages?

ANSWER: David Ricardo

BONUS: It provided empirical evidence for classical conditioning, though it also provoked criticism for its methods.

[10] Identify this psychological experiment where a baby who feared loud noises was also taught to fear rats when the researchers produced a loud sound whenever the baby reached for the rat.

ANSWER: Little Albert experiment

[10] The Little Albert experiment was conducted by this psychologist who wrote “Psychology as the Behaviorist Views It,” and who is credited with establishing the psychological school of behaviorism.

ANSWER: John Broadus Watson

Tossup 6. An expedition against the robber Cycnus sets the scene for a 480-line poem often attributed to this writer. That poem, The Shield of Heracles, is an imitation of the portrayal of Achilles’s shield as described by Homer. A longer work of this writer’s begins with Gaea, Nyx, and Eros and describes the origins of the world. His earlier 800-verse epic lays out the Five Ages of Man and celebrates the role of honest labor in daily farm life. For 10 points, Theogony and Works and Days are among the few surviving works attributed to what 8th-century BCE Greek poet?

ANSWER: Hesiod

BONUS: It ends with a “punch line” from Dr. Spielvogel, the protagonist’s psychoanalyst. For 10 points each:

[10] Name this 1969 novel about the often Oedipal sexual frustrations of the titular character.

ANSWER: Portnoy’s Complaint

[10] Portnoy’s Complaint was written by what Jewish-American writer also known for works such as Goodbye, Columbus and the Pulitzer Prize-winning American Pastoral?

ANSWER: Philip Roth

Tossup 7. One of these was a half-man, half-tortoise who prevented the mountain Mandara from falling into the sea. The third one carried his opponent to the bottom of the ocean after battling him for a thousand years. The last one, whose name roughly translates as “Destroyer of foulness” is set to arrive in the year 428899. The first canto of the Bhagavata Purana lists 22 of them and the ten greatest ones are known as the Dasavatara. For ten points, these are all what forms taken by a certain Hindu god called the ‘preserver’?

ANSWER: Avatars of Vishnu

BONUS: After being freed from jail by the Babylonians, he fled to Mizpah in Benjamin. FTPE:

[10] Identify this prophet who preached during the last days of Judah. He is the author of the Book of Lamentations and whose actions are described in his namesake book.

ANSWER: Jeremiah

[10] Jeremiah was rescued from a well by this last king of Judah, who was deposed by Nebuchadnezzar II in 588 BCE.

ANSWER: Zedekiah

Tossup 8.In an article that appeared in the November 1967 issue of SPORT magazine, he credited his team’s performance that season to Dick Williams and the influx of new players. He was the only hitter in the American Leagueto hit over .300 in 1968, the so-called “Year of the Pitcher,” but in 1975 he hit a ball which became the final out of the World Series.In 1989, his number, 8, was retired by the Boston Red Sox. Name this 23-year player for the Boston Red Sox, the last man to win the batting Triple Crown.

ANSWER: Carl Yastrzemski

BONUS: It seems the big game studios have run out of sequels, which may explain the recent flood of prequels. For ten points each, name some of these highly anticipated prequels.

[10] This prequel to the original PlayStation 2 game takes Kratos to places like Attica and Hades as he attempts to resolve a moral dilemma presented by the gods.

ANSWER: God of War: Chains of Olympus

[10] Also on the PSP, this game puts you in the role of Zack Fair as you learn the secret of Sephiroth’s hatred for Shinra.

ANSWER: Final Fantasy VII: Crisis Core

Category Round Tossups:

Tossup 9. One ruler of this empire turned the city of Djenne in to a center of learning. It emerged from small settlements under the Za dynasty, who were based in Kukiya. Sonni Baru’s lack of strong Muslim belief led many to fear that he would cut off trade, which a rebellion which overthrew him. The empire came to an end in 1591 at the hands of invading Moroccans. For 10 points, name this pre-colonial African empire once ruled by Sonni Ali and Askia the Great, centered at Gao on the banks of the Niger River.

ANSWER: Songhai Empire

Tossup 10. This man published a pamphlet entitled “Proposal for the development of 3-dimensioal chemical structural formulae. His equation relates the change in the equilibrium constant at different temperatures given the change in enthalpy. His work on solutions and his investigations of osmotic pressure earned him the first Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1901. For 10 points, this was what Dutch chemist, whose namesake factor gives the number of moles of solute dissolved in solution per mole of solid solute added?

ANSWER: Jacobus Henricusvan’t Hoff

Tossup 11. It ends with the townspeople singing “Wer win holdes Weib errungen.” As the opera opens, Jaquino requests Marzelline’s hand in marriage but she rebukes him, as she has fallen in love with the title character. In the opening of the second act, Florestan sings “Gott! Welch Dunkel heir!” while sitting in his jail cell. It first premiered under the title Leonore, but the composer continuously revised the opera and the overture alone went through four versions. This is, for 10 points, what only opera by Ludwig van Beethoven?

ANSWER: Fidelio

Tossup 12. The boundary between the Frasnian and Famennian stages of this period marks the Kellwasser event, while the end of the period itself marks the Hangenberg extinction event, one of the largest ever. The fossil bed of the Rhynie chert dates to the early epoch of this period, making it one of the oldest sites anywhere containing terrestrial fossils. By the end of this period, ferns and the first trees had evolved, and early fish called ostracoderms had evolved. For 10 points, identify this geological period which followed the Silurian and preceded the Carboniferous.

ANSWER: Devonian Period

Tossup 13. When her brother Cadmus, the king of the future Thebes, married Harmonia, this woman presented Harmonia with a necklace given to her by her lover. Another brother, Cilix, settled in Asia Minor after giving up the search for her. Some sources say that the creature who carried her off was the same one that Pasiphae fell in love with. A certain god saw her gathering flowers by the sea, and she climbed upon his back after he transformed into a bull. For ten points, name this Phoenician princess raped by Zeus, the namesake of an icy moon of Jupiter.

ANSWER: Europa

Tossup 14. The protagonist’s estate is eventually given to Graziano by Lodovico, who had earlier carried the message that the protagonist was being replaced as governor of Cyprus by a man who had stabbed Montano in Act II. In Act III, that new governor Michael Cassio finds a handkerchief that the protagonist had once given his wife, who is eventually smothered to death as a result of the machinations of Iago. The title character commits suicide after killing Desdemona at the end of, for 10 points, what Shakespeare play about a titular Moor?

ANSWER: Othello

Category Bonuses:

Arts: His first major work was the GeneralMotorsTechnicalCenter in Warren, Michigan. For 15 points, name this Finnish-American architect who designed the main terminal at WashingtonDullesInternationalAirport and the Gateway Arch in St. Louis.

ANSWER: Eero Saarinen

Current Events: She entered the political forefront on Tuesday for the first time in over 20 years. For 15 points, name this former Vice Presidential running mate who left the Clinton campaign after saying that if Obama were white, he would never have gotten as far as he has.

ANSWER: Geraldine Ferraro

Geography: The towns of Villa San Giovanni and Reggio are both located on its east side. For 15 points, name this strait separating Sicily from the Italian mainland, named for the Sicilian town on its west end.

ANSWER: Strait of Messina

History: For 15 points, identify the treaty signed in March 1918 between Russia and the Central Powers which marked Russia’s exit from World War I.

ANSWER: Treaty of Brest-Litovsk

Literature: Her parents, James and Lady Charlotte, want her to marry the wealthy Roger Solmes, but she refuses. For 15 points, name this virtuous woman who dies after Robert Lovelace rapes her, the title character of a Samuel Richardson epistolary novel?

ANSWER: Clarissa

Math Computation: What is the geometric mean of 2, 4, and 5?

ANSWER: 2 times the cube root of 5 (accept variants)

Science: This volatile compound is perhaps best known as the primary ingredient in mothballs. For 15 points, name this white hydrocarbon composed of two fused benzene rings.

ANSWER: Naphthalene or napthene, tar camphor, white tar, albocarbon, or antimite

Trash: May 28th will mark the 10th anniversary of his death. For 15 points, name this former SNL regular was known for playing Bill McNeal on NewsRadio as well as a certain washed-up actor who you may remember from such films as “Lead Paint: Delicious but Deadly.”

ANSWER: Phil Hartman

Tossup 15. After moving to Paris at age 34 to write a biography of salon leader Madame Roland, she began supporting herself by writing magazine articles about the city. She later wrote a serialized biography about Napoleon, and her study of Abraham Lincoln drastically increased the popularity of McClure’s magazine, which later published nineteen installments of her most famous work, an expose about the business tactics of John D. Rockefeller. For 10 points, who was this leading muckraker, the author of The History of the Standard Oil Company?

ANSWER: Ida Tarbell

BONUS: Because this unit is so large, the gauss is sometimes used instead.

[10] Name this MKS unit of magnetic field, named for a Serbian physicist.

ANSWER: Tesla

[10] This law, one of Maxwell’s Equations, relates the magnetic field around a closed loop to the electric current moving through the loop.

ANSWER: Ampere-Maxwell Law (accept variants)

[10] This equation, named for two French physicist, is an inverse square law solution to Ampere’s law, used to compute the magnetic field generated by a steady current.

ANSWER: Biot-Savart Law

Tossup 16. The Japanese release of this album contains a bonus track titled “Put the Boy Back in Cowboy,” and albums bought from Target also featured the track “Walk Like a Man.” Other tracks include “Summertime” and “Till We Ain’t Strangers Anymore,” which features LeAnne Rimes. The album was conceived as a result of the success of “Who Says You Can’t Go Home,” a duet with Jennifer Nettles, on their previous album.For 10 points, name this tenth studio album by Bon Jovi.

ANSWER: Lost Highway

BONUS: Identify the following things about ice in Norse Mythology, FTPE:

[10] This northern realm is an icy plain, and is often mentioned interchangeably with Helheim. When the cold from this realm met the sparks from Muspellheim, Ymir was created.

ANSWER: Niflheim

[10] When the cow Audhulma licked the icy blocks of Niflheim, she revealed this first god, as mentioned in the Prose Edda. He was the father of Borr and grandfather of Odin.

ANSWER: Buri

[10] This goddess of ice and winter married Njord for a time. She also put a serpent over Loki’s head whose venom would torment him until the end of days.

ANSWER: Skadi

Tossup 17. Experiments at CERN’s SPS were the first to try creating a form of plasma formed entirely of quarks and these particles. They are electrically neutral but can carry both color and anticolor charge simultaneously. Eight of them are known to exist, and hypothetical hadrons composed of them are called glueballs. The study of the force controlled by these particles is called Quantum Chromodynamics. For 10 points, identify these gauge bosons which mediate the strong nuclear force and derive their name from how they hold nuclei together.

ANSWER: Gluons

BONUS: This group of Scots-Irish frontiersmen was responsible for the extermination of the Susquehannock tribe.

[10] Name this vigilante organization who marched on Philadelphia in 1764, where Ben Franklin put an end to the crisis.