These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 1998-03-02,
and should be interpreted accordingly. All questions were written
by members of the Usual Suspects, but have been reformatted and
may have been retyped and/or edited by me. I will reveal the
correct answers in about 3 days.
For further information, including an explanation of the """
notation that may appear in these rounds, see my 2020-06-23
companion posting on "Reposted Questions from the Canadian
Inquisition (RQFTCI*)".
I did not write either of these rounds.
* Game 6, Round 4 - Entertainment - Pen Portraits
Read the description; name the movie star described. I'll add
a hint that all of them were best known in, broadly speaking,
the mid-20th-century period.
1. Dwight MacDonald said: "She is as wholesome as a bowl of corn
flakes and at least as sexy."
2. Someone said of herself: "I have eyes like a bullfrog, a neck
like an ostrich, and long limp hair. You have to be good to
survive with that equipment."
3. Billy Wilder said: "Here is class, somebody who went to school,
can spell and possibly play the piano. She's a wispy, thin
little thing, but you're really in the presence of somebody when
you see that girl."
4. Rex Reed said: "Most of the time he sounds like he has a mouth
full of wet toilet paper."
5. Howard Hughes said: "His ears make him look like a taxicab with
both doors open."
6. James Whale said: "His face fascinated me. I made drawings of
his head, adding sharp bony ridges where I imagined the skull
might have joined."
7. Harriet Van Horne said: "She would have made an exemplary prison
matron, possibly at Buchenwald. She had the requisite sadism,
paranoia, and taste for violence."
8. We don't know who said: "She is like a nun with a switchblade."
But we do know that Christopher Plummer said of the same person:
"Working with her is like being hit over the head with a
Valentine card."
9. David Bowie said: "He epitomized the very thing that's so
campily respectable today -- the male hustler. He had quite a
sordid little reputation. I admire him immensely."
10. Cecil Beaton said: "She has a face that belongs to the sea and
the wind, with large rocking-horse nostrils and teeth that you
just know bite an apple every day."
*Note*: Please decode the rot13 after you have finished with all
the questions: Vs lbh whfg fnvq "Urcohea" sbe nal nafjre, cyrnfr
tb onpx naq chg va n svefg anzr.
* Game 6, Round 6 - Sports - Canoeing
1. Which Indian group gave us the word "canoe"?
2. What kind of canoe did fur-traders call a "canot du maītre" or
"Montreal canoe"?
3. The regular paddling stroke is called a bow stroke. Usually a
sternsman or solo canoeist will add an outward hook to this stroke
to steer the canoe in a straight line. What is the resulting
steering stroke called? (We don't mean "stern stroke"; that's
not specific enough.)
4. On a canoe, what is the "painter" and where is it?
5. Most canoes have two seats and one or more narrow bars extending
across the width of the canoe to support the sides and for
paddlers to lean against. What are these bars called?
6. A solo canoeist usually sits a little to the side he/she is
paddling on, so that the canoe tilts to that side. What else
is unusual about a solo paddler's position in the canoe?
7. What is unusual about the so-called Indian stroke?
8. Beginning in the 1850s, the classic cedar-strip canoe was
developed in a Canadian city that gave its name to this style
of canoe and exported it around the world. What city?
9. When paddling solo into a strong headwind, where in a canoe
should you sit?
10. If your canoe begins to tip, you can stabilize it with a quick
paddle motion, for example, slapping the water sharply. What is
this technique called?
--
Mark Brader, Toronto | "And kissed her for a hundred and sixty-nine years."
m...@vex.net | -- Connie Willis, To Say Nothing of the Dog
My text in this article is in the public domain.